Monetizing on Youtube
Monetizing on Youtube
If you're facing legal challenges with a large audience and your channel isn't financially viable, you might be exploiting others instead of delivering genuine value. Relying on ad revenue is unreliable at first—it often doesn’t cover costs until you have enough traction. Spending hours creating and editing content can yield minimal returns, like earning just a few cents per 500 views. The goal should be growing a substantial audience so your efforts eventually pay off. I need someone with recent experience in YouTube copyright matters to help clarify this situation. You mentioned it was up to last month, but now it seems the funds are being held in reserve. It appears they overlooked the importance of fair compensation for creators, prioritizing payments over quality content.
Well sure. Fox tends to be harsh on this, but without any applicable law, any TV station will try to protect its content and ask you to back yourself up. It doesn’t matter if the use is legal—if they can make you pay their fees and legal costs, they’ve won. In my place, I’d stick to short clips, no longer than 2-3 seconds, that give a message instead of a full joke. If it’s meant to share an idea, it qualifies as fair use. If it’s just for humor, they can charge whatever they want. Any content I share (mainly saying “no, I’m not cheating, this is how I built a character to spank your arse videos”) follows explicit consent. The only issue I faced was with Nintendo, who gave permission but then asked me to pay them. I removed the video and posted it on another account, plus a two-minute rant about Nintendo.