Toronto Star

YouTube bars Giuliani from making money off of video ads

- NICO GRANT

YouTube said it suspended Rudy Giuliani from its partner program for at least 30 days after he repeatedly shared misinforma­tion about the 2020 presidenti­al election.

The move means the former New York City mayor and Donald Trump attorney can’t make money from advertisin­g on his videos, a benefit for partners. That limitation has been in effect since last week, YouTube said Tuesday.

Giuliani was also temporaril­y suspended from uploading videos for one week, a restrictio­n that has expired. The world’s largest video website, owned by Alphabet Inc.’s Google, also shut off Giuliani’s access to some YouTube features, such as partner support. He can re-apply to the partner program after 30 days, if he resolves the reasons for his suspension, the company said.

Giuliani promulgate­d conspiraci­es and other misleading claims about the November U.S. presidenti­al election, which Joe Biden won. For the last year, the conservati­ve firebrand has hosted a show on his YouTube channel called “Common Sense.”

On Jan. 15, Giuliani wrote on Twitter that YouTube removed an episode entitled, “This Has NEVER OCCURRED In U.S. History,” in which he rehashes unfounded

claims about the election being stolen and asserts that Biden is a criminal.

Giuliani recommende­d his Twitter followers watch his videos on Rumble, a Toronto-based website that has recently grown more popular with conservati­ve content creators. The last upload on his YouTube channel, which has 583,000 followers, was Jan. 1.

YouTube has been criticized for being slow to crack down on high-profile users who violated its policies in the wake of the Jan. 6 Capitol riot. The company toughened its stance recently, preventing Trump from uploading new videos to his channel in the waning days of his administra­tion, citing the risk he might incite violence. The service also banned Steve Bannon’s podcast after Giuliani appeared on an episode in early January and shared election misinforma­tion.

YouTube can permanentl­y block users from the video platform if they break the company’s rules three times.

 ??  ?? Rudy Giuliani was temporaril­y suspended from uploading videos for one week, a restrictio­n that has expired.
Rudy Giuliani was temporaril­y suspended from uploading videos for one week, a restrictio­n that has expired.

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