YouTube Launches 'Enforcement' on Third-Party Apps Disabling Ads
- YouTube intensifies its campaign to remove third-party apps that break its terms of service.
- When playing a video, users of such apps could experience interruptions in streaming or error message.
YouTube, the most popular video-sharing app and site, has stepped up its campaign forbidding third-party programmers to develop software for ad blockers.
YouTube is trying to do whatever is possible to protect its advertising revenue and to keep a fair environment on its site. Therefore, it has enforced rigorous punishment for any application that is violating it YouTube ToS.
Crackdown Expansion: Disabling Ad-Opting Mobile Apps
This recent development by YouTube is just another bone in the belts of its campaign against apps that enable ad-blocking through the mobile platform.
These third-party apps providing the opportunity to get to the content in YouTube platform without the packaging of ads are now on the rise. Users might be faced the problem of seeing the buffering or seeing the message "the same content is not available in the app".
Enlarging Creator Support and VIP Subscriptions
As digital ads are crucial for facing the cost of copyright and in maintaining the platform's free streaming, this move is in accord with the rationale behind YouTube. Ads are of a great importance since they provide a major source of income that a content creator receives in reward for making their audience excited and entertained.
Youtube has also an Ad-free subscription option for users who don’t like the ads called YouTube Premium which costs $14 per month. These subscriptions with Advertisements-free viewing permit the users to watch TV shows without interruption.
The ads blocking issue which YouTube still fights against shows the company’s eagerness to keep the policy of fair usage rules and to maintain the sustainable character of its digital ecosystem. YouTube does this by making sure that third-party apps that violate its Terms of Service have limited access.