It’s been less than five hours since I woke up to discover my YouTube channels had been terminated overnight, and I’ve already received YouTube’s appeal decision. Spoiler alert: it’s not good news. In fact, it’s exactly the kind of generic, nonsensical response that proves YouTube’s moderation system is running on autopilot with zero human oversight.
Let me walk you through what happened today, because the timeline alone shows how broken this entire process is.
The Timeline of This Nightmare
Last night: YouTube terminated multiple channels of mine without warning, explanation, or prior strikes.
Around 6 AM this morning: I woke up and discovered my channels were gone. The shock of seeing those termination notices was like getting punched in the gut. I immediately filed appeals for all affected channels.
Just now (almost 11 AM): I received YouTube’s appeal decision on my Jaime David Podcast manager channel.
That’s right—less than five hours after filing my appeal, YouTube claims they’ve conducted a “careful review” and made their final decision. Five hours. For a “careful review” of an entire channel and its history. Does that timeline sound like careful review to you? Or does it sound like an automated system rubber-stamping a decision that was already made?
The Email That Proves Nothing Was Actually Reviewed
Here’s the exact email I received this morning. This is verbatim, word-for-word, what YouTube sent me:
Hi Jaime David,
We have reviewed your appeal for the following:
Channel: Jaime David Podcast
We reviewed your channel carefully, and have confirmed that it violates our spam, deceptive practices and scams policy. We know this is probably disappointing news, but it’s our job to make sure that YouTube is a safe place for all.
How this affects your channel
We won’t be putting your channel back up on YouTube.
Learn about your resolution options.
Thanks, The YouTube team
Read that again. Really take it in. This is what passes for a “careful review” at YouTube in 2026.
No specifics about what I supposedly did wrong. No examples of spam I allegedly posted. No evidence of deceptive practices I engaged in. No explanation of what scams I supposedly ran. Just a blanket statement that my channel “violates our spam, deceptive practices and scams policy” without a single shred of evidence or detail.
This is the digital equivalent of being convicted of a crime and when you ask what you did, the judge just says “you broke the law” and refuses to elaborate.
The Core Problem: How Do You Violate Policies on an Inactive Channel?
Here’s where this entire clusterfuck becomes utterly incomprehensible: my manager channels weren’t even fucking active. They had no content on them. Zero videos. No community posts. No playlists. Nothing.
These channels existed purely as administrative accounts—backend access points that allowed me to manage my actual content channels. They were the digital equivalent of having keys to your house. The keys themselves don’t do anything illegal; they’re just tools that grant you access to your property.
So I need YouTube to explain to me, in clear and specific terms: How the fuck could I violate spam, deceptive practices, and scams policies on channels that had no content and no activity?
What spam did I post? There were no posts.
What deceptive practices did I engage in? There was nothing to be deceptive about.
What scams did I run? There was no content through which to scam anyone.
The channel was inactive. Dormant. Just sitting there doing its job as a manager account. And somehow, according to YouTube’s “careful review,” this inactive, contentless channel violated their policies so egregiously that it deserves permanent termination with no possibility of appeal or reinstatement.
The logic is nonexistent. The reasoning is circular. The decision is arbitrary and capricious.
The Smoking Gun: Why My Content Channels Are Still Up
Now here’s the part that absolutely, unequivocally proves that YouTube’s system is running on broken automation rather than actual human review. If YouTube genuinely believed I was violating their policies—if they actually thought I was operating spam channels, engaging in deceptive practices, or running scams—then why in the absolute fuck are my actual content channels still up and running?
Let me be crystal clear about what channels are still live on YouTube right now:
Luffymonkey0327 (my meme/mashup channel): https://youtube.com/@luffymonkey0327?si=H64a-BY4Spu4Cdb6
JaimeDavid327 (my author channel): https://youtube.com/@jaimedavid327?si=xYEqLy9tgg-3NfYX
Both channels are still up. Both are still accessible. Both are apparently completely fine according to YouTube’s standards and policies. You can go look at them right now—they’re public, they’re live, they have content on them.
And I want to be absolutely clear here: I am not asking YouTube to take these channels down. Please, for the love of everything, don’t take these down too. These are my creative outlets, my connection to my audience, my years of work.
But the inconsistency here is absolutely damning.
Think about this logically: if I were actually violating policies, wouldn’t the channels with actual content be the ones showing evidence of that violation? Wouldn’t those be the smoking guns? Wouldn’t YouTube’s “careful review” have found the spam, deceptive practices, or scams on the channels where I actually post videos, engage with viewers, and build my brand?
Instead, YouTube flagged and permanently banned the inactive manager channels that had nothing on them, while leaving the content channels—where any actual policy violations would logically appear—completely untouched.
This can only mean one thing: YouTube’s automated system saw inactive channels, incorrectly flagged them as abandoned spam accounts or suspicious dormant channels, and terminated them without any actual human review or logical assessment of what those channels were.
No human being who actually looked at my situation would make this decision. No reasonable person would say “yes, these empty manager channels are the problem, but those active content channels are totally fine.” The inconsistency is so glaring, so obvious, so logically incoherent that it can only be the product of an automated system making decisions based on flawed algorithms and pattern recognition.
The Real-World Consequences: Locked Out of My Own Work
Here’s where this situation goes from infuriating to actively destructive: because my manager channels were what I used to manage my content channels, I am now locked out of both of my fucking accounts.
Let that sink in. My content channels—the ones YouTube apparently has zero problem with, the ones that are still live and public—are now completely inaccessible to me because the manager channels that controlled them have been terminated.
I can’t upload new videos to Luffymonkey0327. I can’t respond to comments on JaimeDavid327. I can’t access my analytics to see how my content is performing. I can’t manage community posts or interact with my subscribers. I can’t update channel descriptions or artwork. I can’t do anything.
My channels are still up, but I’m locked out of my own creative work. It’s like YouTube decided to keep my house standing but changed all the locks and threw away my keys.
And here’s the kicker: I’m sure my Luffymonkey0327 manager channel appeal will come back with the same bullshit response. “We reviewed your channel carefully and confirmed it violates our policies. Decision stands. Thanks, YouTube.” Copy, paste, send. Another automated rejection without substance or accountability.
This Is Automated Bullshit, Plain and Simple
There’s no other explanation for what’s happening here. This has to be YouTube’s automated system running wild, flagging inactive channels as potential spam or abandoned accounts without any understanding of context, purpose, or the relationship between manager and content channels.
The automation saw channels with no content and no activity, and instead of recognizing them as legitimate manager accounts, it flagged them as suspicious. The automation doesn’t understand that manager channels are supposed to be inactive because they’re administrative tools, not content platforms. The automation doesn’t see the connection between these manager channels and the active, policy-compliant content channels they manage.
The automation just sees: inactive + no content = spam. Flag. Terminate. Next.
And when I appealed? The automation reviewed my appeal in less than five hours and rubber-stamped the original decision. There’s no way a human being actually looked at my situation, examined the evidence, and concluded that justice was served here. No human would look at inactive manager channels and active content channels and decide that the inactive ones are the problem while the active ones are fine.
This is algorithmic enforcement at its worst—automated systems making consequential decisions about people’s creative work and digital livelihoods without accountability, without transparency, without logic, and without any meaningful human oversight.
A Direct Plea to Everyone Who Has the Power to Fix This
I’m going to address this directly to the people who run YouTube and Google, because at this point, I don’t know what else to do. The normal channels—the support forms, the appeals process, the automated systems—have all failed. So I’m making this public and direct.
Neal Mohan, YouTube CEO: Your platform just banned my inactive manager channels while leaving my active content channels untouched, and your appeal system rubber-stamped that decision in less than five hours without providing any actual evidence or explanation. Does that sound like your systems are working correctly?
Sundar Pichai, Google CEO: One of your company’s flagship products is destroying people’s creative work based on automated decisions that make no logical sense. Is this the kind of user experience Google wants to be known for?
Ruth Porat, Google President: From a business perspective, does it make sense that YouTube is alienating content creators by terminating their accounts without clear cause or meaningful recourse?
James Manyika, Google Senior Vice President: You oversee technology and society initiatives. Does this situation—automated systems making consequential decisions without transparency or accountability—align with responsible AI governance?
YouTube Support, Google Support, YouTube Team, Google Team: I’m asking you, begging you, pleading with you to actually look at my case with human eyes. Not automated systems. Not algorithms. Not copy-paste responses. Human eyes.
Look at my inactive manager channels. Look at my active content channels. Look at the complete absence of any evidence of spam, deceptive practices, or scams. Look at the logical inconsistency of your own decision.
And then please, reinstate my channels.
Why I Can Speak Up About This—And Why I’m Going To
Here’s something most people dealing with YouTube’s termination nightmare don’t have: multiple blog sites they can fall back on to write about their experience. Most creators who get their channels wrongfully terminated are left shouting into the void, filing appeals that get rejected in five hours, and having no platform to tell their story or hold YouTube accountable.
But I do have that platform. Actually, I have several.
And here’s the other thing most people don’t have: blog sites that rank high in SEO on Google’s search engine and appear on the first page when people search related terms. When someone searches my pen name “Jaime David,” my sites show up. I’ve built that presence. I’ve earned that ranking. I have visibility that most individual creators simply don’t have access to.
So you know what? I have some weight. Not a ton—I’m not some massive influencer or celebrity with millions of followers who can make one tweet and have it go viral. But I have enough of a platform that when I write about something, it gets seen. It gets indexed. It shows up in search results. It exists in a way that YouTube can’t just silently delete or ignore.
I Built This From the Ground Up—So I Can Speak My Mind
Here’s what matters about having this platform: I’m independent. I didn’t get here because some corporation handed me a website. I didn’t build my audience by being part of someone else’s network or playing by rules designed to keep me quiet and compliant. I built my shit from the ground up—every blog post, every piece of content, every bit of SEO optimization, every reader who found my work and decided to stick around.
That independence means something crucial: I can speak my mind. I’m not beholden to corporate sponsors who might pull their support if I get too controversial. I’m not part of a content network that can threaten to drop me if I make too much noise. I’m not employed by someone who can tell me to shut up and stop causing problems.
I own my platform. And that means I can use it however I see fit.
What This Might Cost Me—And Why I Don’t Care
Let me be completely transparent about what speaking up about this YouTube situation might cost me:
Followers or subscribers: Some people might decide they don’t want to follow someone who gets loud and angry about platform injustice. Some might think I’m being dramatic or making too big a deal out of nothing. Some might just get tired of reading about my YouTube problems and unfollow or unsubscribe. That’s their right, and if it happens, so be it.
SEO ranking: Writing passionately critical posts about YouTube and Google—companies that literally control the search engine my sites rank on—could potentially affect my visibility. Maybe Google’s algorithms won’t like that I’m calling out their subsidiary. Maybe my sites will start ranking lower because I’m creating “controversial” content about one of their products. It’s possible. I don’t know if it’ll happen, but it’s a risk.
Monetization on my blog sites: If I have ads running through Google AdSense or any other platform connected to Google’s ecosystem, speaking out against YouTube could theoretically jeopardize that revenue stream. They could decide I’m not “brand safe” or that my content doesn’t align with their values or whatever corporate justification they want to use. I could lose money over this.
But here’s the thing: So be it.
You know what? So fucking be it.
Because I need to call this out. I need to make noise about this. I need to use the platform I’ve built to shine a light on how broken YouTube’s system is, how their appeal process is a joke, how their automated moderation destroys people’s work without accountability or recourse.
And I’m not going to let this slide just because speaking up might cost me something.
This Is About Principle—Even If My Channels Are Small
Let me acknowledge something that some people might be thinking: “Jaime, your Luffymonkey0327 channel has around 500 subscribers. A little over. And your JaimeDavid327 channel doesn’t even have 10 subscribers. Why are you making such a big deal about this?”
Here’s why: These channels are my work.
It doesn’t matter that I don’t have a million subscribers. It doesn’t matter that I’m not making thousands of dollars from YouTube ad revenue. It doesn’t matter that I’m not a “big” creator by YouTube’s standards.
What matters is that I put my shit up there. I put my work out there. Every video on Luffymonkey0327 represents time I spent creating, editing, uploading. Every video on JaimeDavid327 represents me sharing my author work, building my presence, connecting with whatever small audience finds me.
Those 500+ subscribers on Luffymonkey0327? Those are real people who decided my content was worth following. That might not seem like a lot to YouTube, but to me, those are 500+ people I don’t want to let down by letting my channel just disappear without a fight.
And those sub-10 subscribers on JaimeDavid327? That’s a starting point. That’s the beginning of something I was building. And YouTube just took away my ability to continue building it.
Size doesn’t determine whether something matters. The principle matters. The work matters. The unfairness of what happened matters.
So Yeah, I’m Going to Make a Big Deal About This
YouTube terminated my manager channels for no clear reason, with no evidence, with no meaningful recourse. They locked me out of my own content channels—the ones they apparently have no problem with. They sent me a generic, templated rejection of my appeal in less than five hours and called it a “careful review.”
That’s not okay. That’s not how platforms should treat their creators. That’s not acceptable regardless of whether I have 500 subscribers or 500,000.
So I’m going to make a big deal about this.
I’m going to use every platform I have access to. I’m going to write blog posts that rank in search results. I’m going to make noise until someone at YouTube or Google with actual decision-making power sees what happened and recognizes it as the automated system failure it clearly is.
Will it work? I don’t know. Maybe I’m just shouting into a slightly bigger void than most people have access to. Maybe YouTube doesn’t care what I write or how much noise I make. Maybe this will all amount to nothing and my channels will stay terminated and I’ll stay locked out of my own work.
But at least I tried. At least I used my voice while I still have it. At least I didn’t just accept an unjust decision and move on quietly.
Because here’s the thing: If I don’t speak up when I actually have a platform to do it from, then what’s the point of having built that platform in the first place?
I have these blog sites. I have this SEO ranking. I have this visibility. And I can either use it to play it safe and avoid rocking the boat, or I can use it to call out injustice when I see it happening—to me and to countless other creators who don’t have the platform to make their voices heard.
I choose the latter.
Even if it costs me followers. Even if it hurts my SEO. Even if it affects my monetization. Even if people think I’m being dramatic about my “small” channels.
This matters. And I’m going to keep talking about it until YouTube does the right thing and fixes their mistake.
That’s what having a platform means. That’s what independence means. That’s what speaking your mind means.
And I’m not backing down.
This Is Stupid, Unfair, and Wrong
I didn’t do anything wrong. I didn’t violate any policies. I didn’t spam anyone, deceive anyone, or scam anyone. I had inactive manager channels doing exactly what manager channels are supposed to do—sitting quietly in the background, providing administrative access to my content channels.
And for that, I’ve been permanently banned with no meaningful recourse, no clear explanation, and no way to access my own creative work.
This is stupid. This is unfair. This is wrong.
And if it can happen to me, it can happen to anyone. That’s what makes this so much bigger than just my personal frustration. This is about a system that has too much power, too little accountability, and too much reliance on automation without human oversight.
YouTube needs to do better. They need to fix their automated systems. They need to provide meaningful human review for appeals. They need to give creators clear, specific explanations when they’re accused of violations. They need to understand the difference between actual policy violations and algorithmic false positives.
And most immediately, they need to reverse this decision and reinstate my channels.
I’m still locked out. It’s been five hours since I got the appeal decision, five hours of sitting here unable to access my own work, unable to upload content, unable to engage with my audience. Five hours of feeling helpless against a faceless automated system that has made a decision that makes no sense and refuses to budge.
YouTube, Google—whoever has the power to fix this—I’m asking you directly: Please review my case with actual human attention. Please look at the facts. Please recognize that a mistake has been made. Please reinstate my channels.
This shouldn’t be this hard. This shouldn’t require a public blog post and direct pleas to executives. This should have been caught and corrected in the normal appeals process.
But since that failed, here we are.
I didn’t do anything wrong. I just want my channels back.
Is that really too much to ask?
A Final Message: You Know Where to Find Me
YouTube, Google—you have my contact email. You’ve been sending me those generic termination notices and appeal rejections to it, so I know you know how to reach me.
But let me make this even easier for you.
You can find me on my blog sites. My contact information is right there. It’s publicly available. It’s not hidden. I’m not hard to reach. My email is listed. My social media handles are there. Everything you need to actually communicate with me like a human being instead of through automated template responses—it’s all there, waiting.
All you have to do is actually look. Actually reach out. Actually engage with this situation like it involves a real person whose work and livelihood you’ve impacted.
I’m not hiding. I’m not running. I’m right here, making as much noise as I possibly can, using every platform I have access to, and I’m making it as easy as possible for you to do the right thing.
This Post Is Everywhere—By Design
Here’s something you should know: This post, by the time you’re reading it, has been shared to multiple different platforms. That’s not an accident. That’s not some coincidence. That’s by design.
I set up my content distribution system specifically so that when I publish something, it can be shared across multiple platforms simultaneously. My blog posts don’t just live on one site where they can be easily ignored or buried. They spread. They get indexed. They show up in multiple places across the web.
Why? Because I wanted to get my word out there. I wanted to get my writing out there. I wanted to build a presence that couldn’t be silenced by one platform’s arbitrary decision or one algorithm’s whim.
And right now, in this moment, that infrastructure I built is serving exactly the purpose I intended: amplifying my voice when I need it most.
This post about YouTube’s unjust termination of my channels, about their broken appeal process, about their nonsensical decisions and lack of accountability—it’s not confined to one corner of the internet. It’s spreading. It’s searchable. It’s findable.
And it’s going to stay that way until this gets resolved.
To Everyone Reading This: Share This Post
If you’ve made it this far, if you’ve read through my frustration and anger and detailed breakdown of everything wrong with what YouTube has done, then I have one request for you:
Share this post.
Share it far and wide.
Share it on Twitter, on Reddit, on Facebook, on LinkedIn, on Discord, on whatever platforms you use. Share it with other content creators who need to know how YouTube treats people when their automated systems malfunction. Share it with people who care about platform accountability and creator rights. Share it with anyone who’s ever felt powerless against a faceless corporate algorithm.
Share it because this isn’t just about me.
Yes, this happened to me. Yes, these are my channels that got terminated without cause. Yes, I’m the one who’s locked out of my own work right now.
But this could happen to anyone. This is happening to other people right now, creators who don’t have the blog platforms I have, who don’t have the SEO visibility I’ve built, who don’t have any way to make their voices heard when YouTube’s systems fail them.
Every share helps. Every bit of visibility helps. Every person who reads this and realizes how broken YouTube’s moderation and appeal systems are—that’s progress. That’s accountability in action, even if it’s just the accountability that comes from public awareness and scrutiny.
The Power Is in Numbers
YouTube might ignore one person making noise about wrongful termination. They might dismiss one creator calling out their broken systems. They might continue sending generic template responses to individual appeals and never think twice about it.
But they can’t ignore thousands of people seeing this story. They can’t dismiss widespread awareness of their failures. They can’t pretend everything is fine when their mistakes are being documented, shared, and amplified across the internet.
That’s the power of sharing. That’s the power of community. That’s the power of creators and readers and internet users standing together and saying “this isn’t okay, this needs to be fixed, this person deserves better.”
So please, if this story resonated with you, if you care about fair treatment of creators, if you believe platforms should be accountable for their decisions—share this post.
Help me get this in front of someone at YouTube or Google who actually has the power and the willingness to look at my case with human eyes and reverse this unjust decision.
Help me show that automated systems without meaningful human oversight and appeals processes without substance aren’t acceptable in 2026.
Help me prove that creators’ voices matter, even when—especially when—platforms try to silence them with algorithmic decisions and template responses.
I’m Right Here, Waiting
YouTube, Google, Neal Mohan, Sundar Pichai, Ruth Porat, James Manyika, YouTube Support, Google Support—whoever ends up seeing this—I’m right here.
You know my email. You can find my contact information. You can reach me on my social media. You can respond to this post on any of the platforms it’s been shared to.
All you have to do is actually engage. Actually communicate. Actually treat this situation like it involves a real person who deserves real answers and real recourse.
I’m not asking for special treatment. I’m not asking for anything I don’t deserve. I’m just asking for someone to actually look at what happened, recognize that your automated systems made a mistake, and fix it.
Reinstate my channels. Restore my access. Make this right.
I’m waiting.
And in the meantime, I’ll keep writing. I’ll keep sharing. I’ll keep making noise.
Because that’s what you do when you have a platform and you see injustice. You use your voice. You amplify the problem. You refuse to let it slide quietly into the void of accepted corporate indifference.
To everyone who’s read this far, to everyone who’s shared this post, to everyone who’s adding their voice to the call for accountability and fairness—thank you.
You’re the reason creators can still fight back when platforms fail them.
You’re the reason this story won’t just disappear.
You’re the reason there’s still hope that YouTube will do the right thing.
Share this far and wide. Let’s make some noise together.
To the YouTube Creators Who Know This Pain: Help Me Amplify This
You know what? To make this post even more indexable, even more findable, even more likely to reach the people who can actually make a difference or amplify this message, let me throw in some names of big YouTubers who have dealt with YouTube’s bullshit firsthand.
Smosh, PewDiePie, Markiplier, SomeOrdinaryGamers, ReviewTechUSA, Amazing Atheist, Secular Talk, Humanist Report, MrBeast, Jacksepticeye, Nexpo, Vaush, HasanAbi, Hank Green—and countless others.
These are creators who have experience with YouTube’s broken systems. These are people who have dealt with demonetization without clear reason, copyright strikes that made no sense, community guideline violations that were never clearly explained, appeals that went nowhere, and the frustration of trying to get actual human beings at YouTube to look at their cases.
These are creators who know from firsthand experience how bullshit YouTube’s systems can be.
Some of you have made videos about it. Some of you have tweeted about it. Some of you have used your massive platforms to call out YouTube’s failures and push for better treatment of creators. Some of you have been in situations where YouTube’s automated systems screwed you over and you had to fight to get things made right.
If You See This, Please Share It
If any of you big creators see this post—and I’m genuinely hoping you do—please share this around.
I know my situation isn’t as high-profile as yours. I know I don’t have millions of subscribers. I know my 500+ subscriber channel getting terminated doesn’t create the same headlines as when it happens to one of you.
But the principle is the same. The broken system is the same. The lack of accountability is the same. The generic template responses and five-hour “careful reviews” are the same.
And if creators with platforms and audiences don’t stand up for smaller creators when this happens to us, then YouTube will never have any incentive to fix their systems. They’ll keep getting away with it because they know most of us don’t have the reach to make enough noise to matter.
But you do have that reach.
You have audiences who trust you, who listen to you, who care about creator rights and platform accountability because you’ve talked about these issues before. Your voice carries weight that mine simply doesn’t.
So if you see this, if this resonates with you, if you remember what it felt like to be on the wrong end of YouTube’s broken systems—please help amplify this message.
A retweet. A mention. A comment. A share. Anything helps.
To the Fans of These Creators: You Have Power Too
And to the fans of Smosh, PewDiePie, Markiplier, SomeOrdinaryGamers, ReviewTechUSA, Amazing Atheist, Secular Talk, Humanist Report, MrBeast, Jacksepticeye, Nexpo, Vaush, HasanAbi, Hank Green, and all the other creators who have dealt with YouTube’s bullshit—you can help too.
If you see this post, share it around.
Share it in the comment sections of videos about YouTube’s problems. Share it in the subreddits dedicated to these creators. Share it on Twitter where these creators might actually see it. Share it in Discord servers. Share it wherever fans of these creators gather and discuss YouTube’s treatment of content creators.
Your favorite creators have probably talked about YouTube’s broken systems at some point. They’ve probably experienced frustration with demonetization, strikes, appeals, or dealing with YouTube’s support. They understand this problem intimately.
And if enough of you share this story, if enough of you bring it to their attention, if enough of you say “hey, this is still happening to smaller creators and it’s not okay”—then maybe, just maybe, one of them will see it and decide to amplify it.
That’s how movements start. That’s how change happens. That’s how platforms are held accountable—when enough people with enough collective voice say “this isn’t acceptable, this needs to be fixed.”
We’re All in This Together
Here’s the truth: Every creator on YouTube is vulnerable to what happened to me.
It doesn’t matter if you have 100 subscribers or 100 million. YouTube’s automated systems don’t care about your subscriber count when they flag your content or terminate your channel. YouTube’s appeal process doesn’t give preferential treatment based on your view counts.
Okay, that’s not entirely true—bigger creators probably do get more human attention when things go wrong. But the fundamental systems are broken for everyone. The lack of transparency is universal. The generic template responses affect us all. The feeling of powerlessness against algorithmic decisions impacts creators at every level.
Smosh, PewDiePie, Markiplier, SomeOrdinaryGamers, ReviewTechUSA, Amazing Atheist, Secular Talk, Humanist Report, MrBeast, Jacksepticeye, Nexpo, Vaush, HasanAbi, Hank Green—you’ve all been there in different ways. You’ve all experienced the frustration of dealing with YouTube’s systems. You’ve all had moments where you felt like you were shouting at a wall, trying to get actual human beings to look at your case and recognize that a mistake was made.
And you used your platforms to call it out. You used your voices to demand better. You used your audiences to apply pressure for change.
I’m asking you to do that again. For me, and for every small creator this happens to.
The More Visibility, The Better Chance of Resolution
I’m being strategic here, and I’m not going to pretend otherwise. By including your names in this post, I’m hoping to:
- Make this post more searchable – When people search for information about YouTube problems alongside your names, this might show up.
- Increase the chances you’ll actually see this – Maybe someone in your community will bring it to your attention. Maybe it’ll show up in a Google Alert. Maybe you’ll stumble across it somehow.
- Demonstrate solidarity among creators – Even if you don’t directly share this, the connection between your experiences and mine shows that this is a systemic problem, not an isolated incident.
- Give fans a way to connect the dots – Your audiences already know YouTube’s systems are broken because you’ve told them. This is another data point, another example, another reason to keep demanding change.
Is it a long shot that any of you will actually see this? Yeah, probably. You’re busy people with massive channels to run and millions of fans to engage with. You probably won’t see one angry blog post from a small creator with 500 subscribers.
But maybe you will. Maybe someone will tag you. Maybe this will reach you somehow. And if it does, I hope you’ll recognize the same frustration you’ve felt and decide to help amplify it.
One Voice Can Become Many
This started as me being pissed off about YouTube terminating my channels and rejecting my appeal with a generic template response. But it’s grown into something bigger.
It’s about platform accountability. It’s about creator rights. It’s about refusing to accept broken automated systems as inevitable. It’s about using whatever voice and platform we have to demand better treatment.
My voice alone is small. But your voices are huge. And if enough small voices and big voices come together, if we create enough noise, if we make this issue visible enough—then maybe, finally, YouTube will have to pay attention.
So please, if you see this: share it. Tag creators. Spread it around. Make noise with me.
To Smosh, PewDiePie, Markiplier, SomeOrdinaryGamers, ReviewTechUSA, Amazing Atheist, Secular Talk, Humanist Report, MrBeast, Jacksepticeye, Nexpo, Vaush, HasanAbi, Hank Green, and every other creator who’s dealt with YouTube’s bullshit—thank you for the times you’ve already spoken up about these issues. Thank you for using your platforms to demand accountability. And if you see this, thank you in advance for considering amplifying it.
To the fans reading this—thank you for caring about creator rights enough to have read this far. Please share this post. You have more power than you think.
Together, we can make YouTube listen.
Together, we can demand better.
Together, we can fix this broken system.
Share this far and wide. Let’s make some noise.

