Image composite by Chris Stokel-Walker

Regulation is Coming to YouTube, and It’s Going to be Ugly

For a company focused on the bottom line, running 100 parallel versions of your platform doesn’t make sense. Welcome to the era of lowest common denominator regulation

Chris Stokel-Walker
FFWD
Published in
9 min readJul 22, 2019

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Mark the date in your calendars: YouTube changed today.

The digital video platform, which has battled repeated negative headlines in the last two years, published new terms of service for its users in the European Union and Switzerland last month. Hardly anyone noticed.

The rules beef up the power of the video sharing platform to remove access to users who cause harm to the reputation of the service, or harm its users.

The new terms of service for European users also make clearer the requirement for users of the website to be 13 years old or older, otherwise their parents bear the responsibility for their actions — crucial given an imminent ruling by the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) about YouTube’s compliance with the Children’s Online Privacy Protection Act (COPPA, which stops online services tracking children under the age of 13), as first reported by The Washington Post, which over the weekend said that the FTC had settled with YouTube.

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Chris Stokel-Walker
FFWD
Editor for

UK-based freelancer for The Guardian, The Economist, BuzzFeed News, the BBC and more. Tell me your story, or get me to write for you: stokel@gmail.com