Youtube launches “second chances” pilot program to return previously banned creators

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This story has not been updated. It appears in its original form at time of publication.

Depending on the nature of this post, partisan commentary may not be available or even necessary.

Depending on the nature of this post, partisan commentary may not be available or even necessary.

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.

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.

The Initial September announcement

Previously banned users attempted their own return

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:

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