Skip to main content

Under COPPA, how do I know if my channel is “directed to children”? Since the FTC and New York Attorney General announced their September 2019 settlement with YouTube for violations of the Children’s Online Privacy Protection Act Rule, we’ve heard that question from channel owners – sometimes called content creators. If you’re a channel owner who shares content on user-generated platforms like YouTube, read on for FTC staff guidance about the applicability of the COPPA Rule and how those covered by the Rule can comply with its requirements.

The FTC action against YouTube and Google

The lawsuit against YouTube and Google alleged that the companies illegally collected personal information from children, in violation of COPPA. According to the complaint, the companies collected that information from viewers of child-directed YouTube channels in the form of persistent identifiers that track users across the Internet, but didn’t notify parents and get their consent. To settle the case, YouTube and Google agreed to create a mechanism so that channel owners can designate when the videos they upload to YouTube are – to use the words of COPPA – “directed to children.” The purpose of this requirement is to make sure that both YouTube and channel owners are complying with the law.

A COPPA recap

That provision of the settlement has raised questions among content creators about how to determine if what they upload to YouTube or other platforms is “directed to children.” The answer requires a brief summary of some key COPPA provisions. Passed by Congress in 1998, the Children’s Online Privacy Protection Act is a federal law that protects the privacy of children under 13. COPPA’s foundational principle is one that most people can agree on: Parents – not kids, companies, platforms, or content creators – should be in control when it comes to information collected from children online.

The FTC enforces the law through the COPPA Rule. In general, COPPA requires operators of commercial websites and online services that are directed to children (more about that in a minute) to provide notice and obtain verifiable parental consent before they collect personal information from kids under 13.

The COPPA Rule defines “personal information” to include obvious things like a child’s first and last name or home address, but that’s not all. Under COPPA, personal information also covers what are called persistent identifiers – behind-the-scenes code that recognizes a user over time and across different sites or online services. That could be an IP address or a cookie when it’s used to serve targeted ads. Keep in mind that an operator also might be collecting personal information through an open comment field on its site or service that allows a user under 13 to make personal information publicly available. For example, think of a comment like this on a child-directed site: My name is Mary Jones from Springfield. I love this video!

How COPPA applies to channel owners

So how does COPPA apply to channel owners who upload their content to YouTube or another third-party platform? COPPA applies in the same way it would if the channel owner had its own website or app. If a channel owner uploads content to a platform like YouTube, the channel might meet the definition of a “website or online service” covered by COPPA, depending on the nature of the content and the information collected. If the content is directed to children and if the channel owner, or someone on its behalf (for example, an ad network), collects personal information from viewers of that content (for example, through a persistent identifier that tracks a user to serve interest-based ads), the channel is covered by COPPA. Once COPPA applies, the operator must provide notice, obtain verifiable parental consent, and meet COPPA’s other requirements. For information on how to comply with COPPA, please visit the FTC’s COPPA page for our Six-Step Compliance Plan for Your Business.

How channel owners can determine if their content is directed to children

Under COPPA, there is no one-size-fits-all answer about what makes a site directed to children, but we can offer some guidance. To be clear, your content isn’t considered “directed to children” just because some children may see it. However, if your intended audience is kids under 13, you’re covered by COPPA and have to honor the Rule’s requirements.

The Rule sets out additional factors the FTC will consider in determining whether your content is child-directed:

  • the subject matter,
  • visual content,
  • the use of animated characters or child-oriented activities and incentives,
  • the kind of music or other audio content,
  • the age of models,
  • the presence of child celebrities or celebrities who appeal to children,
  • language or other characteristics of the site,
  • whether advertising that promotes or appears on the site is directed to children, and
  • competent and reliable empirical evidence about the age of the audience.

The determination of whether content is child-directed will be clearer in some contexts than in others, but we can share some general rules of thumb. First, unless you’re affirmatively targeting kids, there are many subject matter categories where you don’t have to worry about COPPA. For example, if your videos are about traditionally adult activities like employment, finances, politics, home ownership, home improvement, or travel, you’re probably not covered unless your content is geared toward kids. The same would be true for videos aimed at high school or college students. On the other hand, if your content includes traditional children’s pastimes or activities, it may be child-directed. For example, the FTC recently determined that an online dress-up game was child-directed.

Second, just because your video has bright colors or animated characters doesn’t mean you’re automatically covered by COPPA. While many animated shows are directed to kids, the FTC recognizes there can be animated programming that appeals to everyone.

Third, the complaint in the YouTube case offers some examples of channels the FTC considered to be directed to children. For example, many content creators explicitly stated in the “About” section of their YouTube channel that their intended audience was children under 13. Other channels made similar statements in communications with YouTube. In addition, many of the channels featured popular animated children’s programs or showed kids playing with toys or participating in other child-oriented activities. Some of the channel owners also enabled settings that made their content appear when users searched for the names of popular toys or animated characters. Want to see the FTC’s analysis in context? Read pages 10-14 of the YouTube complaint.

Finally, if you’ve applied the factors listed in the COPPA Rule and still wonder if your content is “directed to children,” it might help to consider how others view your content and content similar to yours. Has your channel been reviewed on sites that evaluate content for kids? Is your channel – or channels like yours – mentioned in blogs for parents of young children or in media articles about child-directed content? Have you surveyed your users or is there other empirical evidence about the age of your audience?

What are the possible penalties for violating COPPA?

The Rule allows for civil penalties of up to $42,530 per violation, but the FTC considers a number of factors in determining the appropriate amount, including a company’s financial condition and the impact a penalty could have on its ability to stay in business. While Google and YouTube paid $170 million, in another COPPA case settled this year, the operator paid a total civil penalty of $35,000.

Isn’t the FTC taking another look at the COPPA Rule?

Yes, the FTC is currently evaluating the Rule in light of rapid changes in technology. If you would like to comment on the effectiveness of the COPPA Rule and whether changes are needed, the FTC has extended the comment deadline to December 9, 2019.

Where can channel owners go for more information?

A look at the factors in the COPPA Rule will help most channel owners determine if their content is directed to children. If you’re still unsure about how COPPA applies to you, consider contacting an attorney or consulting with one of the COPPA Safe Harbor programs – self-regulatory groups that offer guidance on how operators can comply with the law. Visit the FTC’s website for a list of currently approved Safe Harbor organizations. For more resources, visit the FTC’s Children’s Privacy page for our Six-Step Compliance Plan for Your Business.

 
 
 

Guest
November 25, 2019
This makes me feel a little better, thank you for clarifying some vague details from before.
Grzesiek
November 25, 2019
I do not understand. I create movies, build with Lego blocks. Despite this, my YouTube channel is visited by older people. It's not important. I don't care about children watching it, that's why I want to mark my movies as not for children. Can the FTC consider me a liar? I publish videos that may be for children, but because I want to earn on them, I do not mark them as: intended for children. What am I doing wrong? This is my conscious choice. I am forced to mark movies as: intended for children because they meet all the criteria for such films? Shouldn't YouTube be limiting content right now? I understand that people who create children's films will be forced to give up labeling as: intended for children. I understand that everyone will see these movies, but with limited interaction. Do my toy films that meet the criteria for children's films need to be marked: intended for children? I do not want to. Please clarify this.
Cristian Mahuis
November 25, 2019
"Only People can understand youtube of it's doing for sticking around for years
Davis Boone
November 25, 2019
Also, I will say cool and whatever, whenever I want to, youtube has been going on for a long time so why take the creativity away from all of us darnit!!!!!!!
Guest
November 25, 2019
Hey uh, i kinda don't understand this.. What should i do that my channel doesn't get attacked by COPPA?
Zed
November 25, 2019
Please enforce it on youtube that they make a "general audiance" tap. Clearly the FTC are not after creators who do mixed audiance videos and yet youtube has failed to inform us about it. So please enforce this on youtube. Thank you
Fancyguyy
November 25, 2019
Will all gaming content be covered by COPPA, or will games directed to more mature audiences be safe? Can reviews for things like action figures intended for collectors or older audiences still be covered by COPPA?
Void
November 25, 2019
The only problem here is , people have inactive channels, most of them are lost and probably have content, who knows how many other videos won't be changed , and how are you capable of getting the account back, before getting a fine?
John Morgan
November 25, 2019
I just want to say that I appreciate the motives behind this action, but I am deeply concerned about the implementation. Many Youtubers seem left in the dark as to whether certain videos are covered, and YouTube is telling them nothing but to get a lawyer - which is expensive, and may not even lead to the correct advice in the absence of prior examples. Enormous, life-ruining fines could hit out of nowhere immediately. I strongly urge the FTC to limit the initial fines when establishing standard definitions, and only applying the maximum to repeat violators. I also encourage the FTC to realize that the current rules to child-directed content will basically remove the vast majority of it from the platform, making the internet ultimately a less child-friendly place. I understand the motivation behind turning off comments, to prevent children giving out personal information. But what does making a video not appear in searches, notifications, or recommendations do to protect children's privacy? It's basically a death sentence for the growth of any channel producing this content. Please reconsider these stipulations from your settlement with YouTube. Thanks for your time.
anonymous
March 05, 2020
you know Gacha Life is a dress up game but many people use it for non-child-friendly purposes and also nobody really uses it to just make a video on dress-up so I think Gacha Life shouldn't have to fall under the category of made for kids
Guest
November 25, 2019
According to YouTube's own terms of service, and the guidelines all content creators have to agree too, users of the site must be over 13 or have parental permission to use the site. It's ridiculous to make content creators censor themselves and their channels more. I think the law is too broad to be effective and needs to be reevaluated before forcing us to make a decision which would affect our ability to make content people want to see and make a living doing it.
Lola
November 25, 2019
Why is COPPA happening because their is a YouTube called YouTube kids so please stop kids can go on YouTube kids and the teens can go on YouTube so please stop COPPA please.....................
Guest
November 25, 2019
What if theres a youtube under 18? You cant fine under 18s and they probably have no clue what COPPA is. Thats why I think COPPA should not fine youtubers for that
Anon
November 25, 2019
Keep up the good work FTC. The people complaining about this likely have not seen the disturbing child-directed content this rule is targeting. If everyone knew about the content that has been allowed to exist on YouTube they would gladly suffer a small restriction in their own content creation.
Braincells
November 25, 2019

In reply to by Anon

SMALL restriction that if you do the violation gets 35000 dollars in debt. No, nothing wrong with that.
Kaylakay12 (ok…
November 25, 2019

In reply to by Anon

The thing is, this rule was incredibly vague when it first came out, hencing the outburst. The huge list of items that you could get fined for because it's child friendly.
Guest
November 27, 2019

In reply to by Anon

yes child predation is horrible but parents just give children smart phones which opens up the flood gates to it. YouTube should have a better system but.
Guest
November 25, 2019
Please, do not allow this rule to continue unchecked. The requirements are extremely vague and parents should be paying attention to what their children are watching online! Parents must parent themselves! That famous phrase "it takes a village to raise a child" should not be a thing.
sirmemesalot
November 25, 2019
will posting a video saying that my content is not targeted for kids under the age of 13 help with my channel help when i make it.
Guest
November 25, 2019
I don't understand why the FTC is focused on ads targeting children when there are child predators online!! Why can't you help with that more!!!
Bobby S
November 25, 2019
Please some of us who suffer anxiety and panic attacks depend on these YouTube channels as a way to cope with anxiety. And now we have to worry about you taking them away. These YouTube creators are real people and depend on these channels you make there living ! Please don’t do this
Guest
November 25, 2019
I do not agree with this. You are particularly destroying our entertainment. I know its for the safety for our children but YouTube confirmed that the app was for 13+ and above people. So whats the point of YouTube kids. Without the YouTubers there will be no videos and children to watch. Heck! Did you expect us to pay $42,000? That easily? Do you think were rich? Excuse you, what about the small channels like mine? Those who arent monetized or those who are broke and use youtube for fun? This is absolutely useless. Why wont you ban porn in YouTube than harmless animations,gameplays or edits? This rule will also bring YouTube's ratings down making the company lose their money and jobs. Have you not think this straight? Dont blame us for our content, YouTube allowed us to make our content until this rule came. Please I swear for the love of all YouTubers, Do not pass this please. I will be waiting for the reply thanks
Guest
November 25, 2019
Good Afternoon, This is a very vague law I'm very hard for creators and other websites to understand. I would have the site creator have a rating system like the movies. On some websites like YouTube you need a general audience option as well as 14+, 18+ and under 12. This would be way easier for people a to understand and be to still be able to put out videos and comply with the law at the same time. Thank you
Guest
November 25, 2019
This will affect countless hard-working independent creators on YouTube, children should be very well the responsibility of the parents as the site's terms themselves state that it requires a user to be 13 and older to even create an account. All this is doing is affecting the livelihood of innocent content producers.
Guest
November 25, 2019
What do I do if my videos are for ALL ages?
Sub to the boi…
November 27, 2019

In reply to by Guest

I don’t heckin know but COPPA happens on Jan 1st, 2020
tc
November 25, 2019
Thanks for the clarification. It seems my content is safe.
Peter Martin
November 25, 2019
Unclear criteria and broad brush categorization is not helpful. Animation software content provider confused how to comply. We make 3d content for expensive professional animation software and use youtube to demonstrate methods and created animation art and the content is not directed at children, however it will be appealing to some children. It seems unfair that our publications reach and feedback be inhibited with the COPPA restrictions.
Guest
November 25, 2019
This rule is too broad and doesn’t take the complexities of the real world into consideration. There is a lot of content created now a days that is meant for both children and adults, or includes something like toys, but is aimed at an adult audience. The FTC has to do a better job. Until it can, they should keep out of regulating content. Leave content meant for the ENTIRE family alone.
N/A
November 25, 2019
I already know that I'm no big shot and a single person's words rarely get heard but seriously why is this so vague and it's not the content creators fault for what adds show up except for a box that just like this bill vaguely has any options you literally have to say your 13 and up to even make a account why not just make youtube change their website so you have to have a acount to even get on the website that should fix this whole problem. Slapping a 42 k fine on a content creator will do nothing but cause drama and not only hurt the creator but the FTC reputation aswell this whole mess was made by youtube so let the company fix their problem instead of trying to scare every content creator to conform to this vague list there should not even be a for kids option on youtube, 13 and up only, they caused this let them pay for it not every little acount.
Tamara
November 25, 2019
Hello! I am a bit confused here. As EVERYTHING ‘appeals’ to children. All videos. TV shows and commercials too. Walk inside the grocery store and see how-everything appeals to kids there... So let me understand this, YouTube messed up, agreed to pay a fine, but it’s now being taken out on us? We have NO control on how data was collected. We can’t control parents. It’s not our jobs. Look just scratch the entire darn platform. I’m over it!
Guest
November 25, 2019
Still TOO vague. My channel includes animation, is harmless to children (I know it's not the moral matter of the content that counts) and my goal is target anyone who is old enough to learn languages and I explain things in detailed, but comprehensive ways toddlers simply cannot grasp. As a matter of fact, not even adults understand clearly what many grammar aspects I explain means. My current age report is "55-65" meaning that my current audience is 100% 55-65 which by the way coincides with my face-to-face students' ages who need to learn in order to travel and visit relatives. I use animations because I can represent anything I want through them, unlike what my plain face in front of a camera would. I and many other creators are ruled by fear right now and I would like my channel to be MANUALLY reviewed by the FTC by someone who clearly understands Portuguese because now I and many others cannot fully trust YouTube's binary options offered without considering that kids watch "adult" content such as vehicle reviews, engineering, science, education, music, movie and movie-related content etc. The upcoming sweep is completely up to internal interpretations, so no creator will be really able to ensure they don't mean to help YouTube collect children information illegally. Is commenting, liking, sharing a video considered "child activity"? I am not against COPPA, but it requires human eyes in every video published and a report so that we have time to adjust the channel (or delete it) before we are charged a potential fine for money we don't even make. It may take several years for a creator to actually start seeing monthly cents in the AdSense, it does not happen overnight and it is YouTube who decides monetization rules, not creators. I hope we all have a safe environment both for children and creators. I am sure most of us mean no evil at all. I will keep my channel set as "for kids" even knowing my current audience is 55-65 years old and that I create content for teenagers and adults to understand. Grammar definitely does not "appeal to children" in most cases, but I am now forced to believe it does through YouTube's binary options given. We need channel guidance from by FTC and time to remove our content from YouTube before being charged a thing. Moreover, my channel aims chiefly Portuguese speakers,
Guest
November 25, 2019
Please make the subject explicitly clear because there are people over the age of 13 that are interested in Subject matters that kids like. For example, Video Games are by not only kids but adults as well so you got to make the rules clear so people can understand. Another example is light color, adult like it is that it is generally appealing to eyes and can really get people attention not just kids. Youtube has a general term of incompetence when it come to terms and service and will use bots that are highly infamous for working and generally tend to make the same mistakes over and over when people saying otherwise. Also please change the amount of the fine because 99.9% of content creators can not pay that amount. I’m currently a beginning content creator and these rules will probably kill any chance that other small and upcoming content creators may have. So I humbly ask you can you please make the rules explicitly clear so we can be able to act accordingly.
Guest
November 25, 2019
This rule is taking away the funding for some of my favorite YouTubers, they will not be able to fund new videos and they will not be able to support themselves. It will negatively affect them as individuals, content creators, and us as viewers.
Guest
November 25, 2019
There still needs to be clarification. A few topics that need to be clarified. Sports: on the original release taking about COPPA it listed sports as "kids content". How? Sports are made for everyone, a youtube channel taking about professional sports shouldn't be considered as "made for kids". I could understand if it was a peewee team or midget hockey, leagues that are U14 but not NBA, NHL, MLB, NFL, MLS, or any sport that has players over the age of 14. Video games: this is probably the biggest topic to be talking about. What video games are co sided made for kids? How do we now which games are made for kids? Is it the rating on the game? But then what if a game is rated E? Then that means it's for everyone, and so should not fall under "made for kids". If it's the subject matter then what about video games about superheroes? You could argue that a game like that is made for kids, may even have an E rating, but contains violence, the most non-kid friendly content out there next to sexual themes. Then what about a game like minecraft? It's made for everyone and people of all ages play the game, and enjoy watching videos about it. This needs to be incredibly more transparent. And what about pop culture? What of pop culture is considered made for kids? Star wars? Contains violence. Marvel/DC? Again contains violence, and mature themes. What about rick and Morty? Its animation but is definitely not made for kids. Simpson? And what about lego? If someone is doing a custom build on historic buildings, or buildings from pop culture? What about vehicles or characters from pop culture? What about lego architecture? The list goes on and on. As for the comments section, you need to create an account which states that you must be either over 13, or at least 16 years of age (forgive me I dont recall the exact wording), for precisely the reason to follow COPPA. If a child lies about their age, it isnt the content creators fault, its either the fault of youtube for not screening, or it's the fault of the parents for not parenting. Let me ask you this, if a child walks into a movie that's rated 14A, and the child is 13 or below. Os it the directors fault ( on this case the content creator)? Is it the cinemas fault ? ( or in this case youtube) is it the fault of the parent? Undoubtedly it's the parents fault. Why will you fine content creators who do not collect data on children, when it is youtube that does that. Owning a channel does not equate to a website or web service. It's more akin to to a producer, and director of a movie. YouTube is the cinema, that makes money off of the work of others, and in turn the movies make money off the cinema. The FTC should go after youtube, not individual content creators, again individual content creators are not collecting data from kids, the youtube is.
Guest
November 25, 2019
I worry that the crochet , sewing, homesteading, gardening videos I watch daily will be affected by this. These channels teach different things that could appeal to children, but are not made for children. I started crocheting and sewing at 9 years old, so I could see that would appeal to some. I don't find these videos harmful to children at all. It's teaching a skill that is useful. To put the pressure on content makers instead of the parents is not right in my eyes. Parents need to be held responsible for what their children watch. As a parent I didn't let my children watch certain TV shows, and none were allowed a phone until 16 years of age. None had access to a computer except at school. Which made it hard when teachers gave homework that involved using the computer. I controlled which movies they saw and so on. Content makers are not here to make sure your child doesn't watch their videos, that is the parents job. So to fine the content makers is wrong on so many levels. There needs to be a box for content makers to check that this video is geared towards adults. To much left in the unknown area.
Guest
November 25, 2019
YouTube was originally a dating site before it became a place to create videos and upload them for fun. By this time it was intended for the little guys to have a chance to be successful. But now it has become extremely difficult for smaller channels to succeed since YouTube set their standards so high for the partner program with needing to have 1,000 subscribers and over 4,000 watch hours within a 12 month span. Then when you have reached that mark your channel is audited and "fake" accounts subscribed to your channel are removed and after that you no longer qualify for the partner program and you have to start all over again. It is very discouraging at times. Now COPPA is being put into effect and it will make everything even more difficult and extremely discouraging. There is a massive community out there that have Reborn Dolls that are not meant for young children they are considered works of art and are collected by ADULTS. But COPPA wont see it that way. Please reconsider this rule as it will create a massive negative impact on MILLIONS of people. Instead of going through ALL the accounts on YouTube target just the ones being produced by kids ONLY not the adults. For a lot of people YouTube is how they make a living and it's their only source of income... PLEASE PLEASE PLEASE reconsider this rule. TIA
Guest
November 25, 2019
I know that some videos contain swearing and sexual content and plenty of kids are watching this but that dosent mean you have to make a rule about this if anything it's the childs fault for watching it and some parents are complaining that YouTube has all this sexual content and other things but if you think about it kids shouldn't have been allowed to use YouTube in the first place Im not going to blame the content on YouTube im blaming the parents and children I recommend you to get rid of this rule and just ask people to delete any sexual content and for swearing you could ask them to bleep it out but this is only my opinion
Guest
November 25, 2019
I'm going to lobby my congressman to fire everyone in charge of the ftc
An Autistic adult
November 25, 2019
Hey I personally don’t think that this is fair considering a lot of stuff that this will basically get rid of is also stuff that is popular amongst autistic people, many of us take on a special interest that we love focusing on that falls under some of these categories, many of us color stem and like watching stuff that we find visually satisfying, many of us use these videos to calm down on our rough days in order to better fit in to a world that is more suited to people who aren’t neurodivergent. By doing this less videos will be made that cater to us and many that are will be taken down or put away where we can’t easily access them. Please please please reconsider, both I and my feoncé are autistic adults who will suffer from this decision, all I ask is that this is re-evaluated with Autistic people in mind, thank you for your time.
Guest
November 25, 2019
It is the parent's responsibility to manage what their kids are watching. Not the content creators. This is a prime example of things never being the parent's fault, but someone else's. This is not how this should be handled.
Guest
February 20, 2020
This enforcement will now encourage content creators to be more vile in their videos just to make sure it’s not child directed. This makes it hard for creators who do crafts and such. I sew, none of what I sew is geared towards children and yet there are children that like to sew or are learning to sew. Why are the creators being penalized and the parents are not raising their children or giving consent to their children on YouTube when they hand their devices over to them. Why not put parental blocks on YouTube so the parent can block videos and such? It seems more of big brother trying to dictate what the creator is allowed to do and taking the responsibility off of parent s to parent their children.
Guest
November 25, 2019
Sorry, BUT. You forget that YOUTUBE KIDS EXIST. I mean its parents fault. I never got an account until 11. WARM PARENTS DONT RUIN YT.
Guest
November 25, 2019
My question about this is, where does the line fall. What subject matters are going to be overly targeted, what music would you target? What would this mean for the smaller content creators, that don't make money, that have less than 1000 subscribers? What does this mean for content creators that return to YouTube in 2020, after a long hiatus, and have no clue what to do?? I have so many questions and not enough answers.
Hasan
November 25, 2019
Please stop this I don't want my favoriye channel gone over night
Sara McClein
November 25, 2019
There is no way to actually protect children from adult content. Even before the internet you couldn't. There was no way to censor a person in real life jumping out of a vehicle, which is burned into my memory. So what is the real point of this? Just to make an extra buck in your fat pockets? To censor and oppress creativity and imagination? I get that YouTube collected data on children, is that what we're trying to stop? What kind of data? For targeted advertising? And what harm is targeted advertising? Is it location data? Is the data sold to child molesters? Are children being molested because of data collection? What is the harm in the collection of data? What prompted this whole thing? Originally you had to be 13+ to have a YouTube account. I know those younger than 13 can LIE but NO ONE can control that. Quit trying to control things you cannot. Also, FTC, you really need to re-evaluate your definition of "child content" Actually look into today's media besides news and politics and business, look into the creative side of things. Creativity is not just for children, it's for adults too. It's for expression of your inner self. Your SOUL, if you will.
Guest
November 25, 2019
I mean, if YouTube Kids exists and parents choose to use YouTube over Kids, then it's their fault. At least tell YouTube to fix and patch up YouTube Kids. One suggestion may be to have YouTube only available to people who have an account, and have guests only given the ability to see child-friendly videos. Hope you take account into all our suggestions.
Dork lord
November 25, 2019
This is stupid it seems like your higher-ups are being paid off by cable companies because YouTube's becoming a threat to their profits I think you should be investigated for corruption
Guest
November 25, 2019
I am an Autistic youtube content creator whos channel is more geared towards young adults and even adults, so this is very confusing for me. And what i would love for the FTC to do is to try and help content creators like us because my content has already been censored or down right hidden by the youtube algorithm because of the content i produce. So i ask that if its possible that the FTC take lead on this instead of COPPA or at least address in detail channels that are more oriented towards guns, combat sports, and other more Teen to young adult sports like paintball and airsoft. Thank you for your time and i wish for the best of luck for everyone.

Get Business Blog updates