Heads up, Creators:
— TeamYouTube (@TeamYouTube) December 13, 2018
On Dec 13-14 you may see a noticeable decrease in your sub count as we remove spam subscriptions. If spam is removed, you'll see a YouTube Studio alert: https://t.co/3KWMixSXRl
This should help give you confidence that the subs you do have are real fans!
NOTE: For all latest, breaking news related to PewDiePie, other YouTubers, and YouTube in general, head here.
YouTube has announced they’re going after spam subscriptions. In a tweet sent out by Team YouTube, the company said users may see a noticeable decrease in their sub count as spam subscriptions are being removed. Following is the tweet in question:
The details of the announcement are in a thread on Google Product Forums. Here’s a relevant excerpt from that thread:
We’ve recently identified and fixed an issue that caused some spam not to be removed. Today/tomorrow, we’ll be taking action and removing subscribers that were in fact spam from our systems
The announcement thread also contains a useful FAQ section where-in YouTube explains if they remove spam subscribers from your channel, you should see a banner in YouTube Studio or Classic Creator Studio.
Also, channels that fall below 1,000 subscribers due to this action will no longer meet the minimum requirement for YPP and will be removed from the program. You can check out the complete details here.
PewDiePie, YouTube’s most subscribed channel reacted to the development with a light hearted comment.
https://twitter.com/pewdiepie/status/1073336626758209537
But on a serious note, Felix supported the move:
https://twitter.com/pewdiepie/status/1073340728296783873
Of course, fans of the Swedish YouTuber believe this change will widen the sub gap between PewDiePie and T-Series, making it even more difficult for the latter to catch up. Currently, the gap already stands at 1 million.
https://twitter.com/FerencSMM/status/1072598040601600000
It’d be interesting to see how YouTube’s action against spam subscribers affects both these channels and the subscriber battle between them.
PiunikaWeb is a unique initiative that mainly focuses on investigative journalism. This means we do a lot of hard work to come up with news stories that are either ‘exclusive,’ ‘breaking,’ or ‘curated’ in nature. Perhaps that’s the reason our work has been picked by the likes of Forbes, Foxnews, Gizmodo, TechCrunch, Engadget, The Verge, Macrumors, and more. Do take a tour of our website to get a feel of our work. And if you like what we do, stay connected with us on Twitter (@PiunikaWeb) and other social media channels to receive timely updates on stories we publish.