(Twitter / @summoningsalt)

Any video game fan and YouTube enjoyer has likely stumbled across Summoning Salt, arguably the internet's premier speedrunning historian who has carved a significant niche on the platform with his lengthy, detailed and surprisingly gripping documentaries about the history of various video games' world record speedruns.

For many of his 1.5 million subscribers, each Summoning Salt video is a "set-aside-an-hour" event, as fans can expect nitty gritty details about various speedrunners attempting to break classic games with frame-perfect tricks in order to shave seconds off their personal best times.

What they don't expect (nor do they ever receive) is an excess of profanity and nudity, as Summoning Salt's videos tackle the subjects meticulously and professionally without a sensationalist tone or angle to hook in viewers.

However, a recent fracas between Summoning Salt and YouTube has unfolded over the following two weeks, as YouTube made the bizarre decision to age-restrict Salt's latest video, an exhaustive 80-minute history of Mega Man II speedruns.

Know Your Meme can independently confirm that, on the surface, there is nothing untoward about Salt's video. There is no excessive swearing, blood or Mega Man characters ripping their clothes off to do sex acts.

Still, YouTube confusingly appears to have honed in on a three-second clip where a speedrunner drops the F-bomb repeatedly after screwing up a speedrun. All but the most sheltered of YouTube viewers will have heard far worse in their travels, but YouTube inexplicably decided that it was enough to age-restrict Salt's documentary — whether by an auto-mod or human moderator.

Luckily, the day after putting the age restriction in place, YouTube removed it and tweeted a straightforward apology saying it "screwed up."

However, this would not be the end of YouTube's apparent blunders. One week later, they age-restricted his Mega Man II video again. The reason this time? "Sex and nudity."

This was truly baffling to Salt and onlookers alike, as even if YouTube was on shaky ground enforcing an age restriction due to profanity (Salt himself pointed to an AVGN video that had a much higher concentration of profanity but wasn't restricted), there is nothing in his Mega Man II video that could seemingly be argued as violating YouTube's sex and nudity policy.

On Monday, Salt then reported that YouTube had sent him yet another email regarding its decision, saying "senior members" of the team had decided the video violated its profanity policy.

Summoning Salt told Kotaku he believed the fiasco lost him between $5,000 and $6,000 in revenue, a potentially devastating sum for a smaller creator.

As of last night, Salt stated he plans to reupload the video with the profanity completely removed, though the damage has likely been done, as the original still racked up over 1.4 million views before he deleted it.

The controversy highlights yet another baffling moderation decision that has harmed creators online. Most recent cases of unclear and heavy moderation harming creators have come from Twitch, which is part of the reason why some Twitch creators have discussed migrating to YouTube.

However, while Twitch has notoriously ticked off some of its high-profile streamers with its mysterious moderation policy, it seems YouTube has its own set of problems.


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Comments 5 total

Revic

Update from Summoning Salt's patreon:
"That being said, I have to level with all of you – the re-upload of my Mega Man 2 video is actually performing quite well. Much better than I would have thought. It is making up for the difference in revenue that I would have received had the initial video not gotten age-restricted. So, there are no hard feelings at all if you'd like to cancel your Patreon support. I just want to make sure you have all the information. I had lost out on some big time money after the age-restriction, but the new video is making up for that. "

4

Kenetic Kups

they double down because not to would mean questioning their bloated and bardly funtioning algorythm

2

autoreloader

Youtube, you already have Youtube Kids for sanitized videos. You reach a new low everyday for taking actions like this on perfectly acceptable videos that fit YOUR OWN GUIDELINES. What's the point of "broadcasting ourselves" if you meddle with everything like an overbearing movie producer?

11

Red123

Must have been Wily's doing!

4
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