The announcement
The premier video-sharing platform has announced the opening of it’s “second chances” pilot program that will allow a limited slate of terminated accounts to return to the platform and begin publishing once more. But not everyone is satisfied.
Today is the day we're launching our pilot program to give some previously terminated creators a chance to rejoin YouTube.
— TeamYouTube (@TeamYouTube) October 9, 2025
We know there's a lot of interest and questions – key points below:
* What’s happening? Starting today, some previously terminated creators will have the…
Reactions have been largely negative
Creators were quick to take issue with YouTube’s one-year probationary period, seeing this as an arbitrary rule that contradicted the principle of the program. Many initially interpreted the announcement as an indication that YouTube was ready to acknowledge that its community standards had been repeatedly misapplied to censor opinions.
Hey @TeamYouTube, will this program expand in the coming days? I got terminated in 2021, reporting on the 2020 election, a policy you guys rescinded in 2023. I'm not fussed about not getting the channel back, but I'd appreciate an opportunity to create a new one.
— George (@BehizyTweets) October 9, 2025
I don't have… pic.twitter.com/1MV7kaldvR
We've DMed you more info
— TeamYouTube (@TeamYouTube) October 9, 2025
The Initial September announcement
We've had a lot of questions about a pathway back to YouTube for some terminated creators to set up a new channel. This will be a limited pilot project that will be available to a subset of creators in addition to those channels terminated for policies that have been deprecated.…
— Updates From YouTube (@UpdatesFromYT) September 23, 2025
Previously banned users attempted their own return
YouTube has shut down the newly created channels of Nick Fuentes and Alex Jones.
— AF Post (@AFpost) September 25, 2025
Follow: @AFpost pic.twitter.com/RyiD5m08n7
Following the initial September announcement, a number of conservative commentators who had been shut out of the platform, attempted to make their own new accounts. Alex Jones and Nick Fuentes were the most notable among these returnees and were immediately banned by the platform prompting this second statement:
We terminated these channels as it’s still against our rules for previously terminated users to start new channels – the pilot program for terminations (that many folks referenced this week) isn’t available yet and will be a limited pilot program to start. We’ll have more to…
— TeamYouTube (@TeamYouTube) September 25, 2025
We’ve seen some previously terminated creators try to start new channels. To clarify, our pilot program on terminations is not yet open. It’s still against our Community Guidelines for previously terminated users to use, possess or create other channels and we’ll terminate new…
— Updates From YouTube (@UpdatesFromYT) September 25, 2025