Until he's found guilty, and even after, it's hard to understand why YouTube would base their monetization on Social Credit. Unless it's merely a stage performance to normalize the Social Credit system.
To expound, there are felons monetized on YouTube who talk about committing crimes and living in prison. If felonious accusations are enough to demonetize--then why do the convicted felons have ads?
Until he's found guilty, and even after, it's hard to understand why YouTube would base their monetization on Social Credit. Unless it's merely a stage performance to normalize the Social Credit system.
To expound, there are felons monetized on YouTube who talk about committing crimes and living in prison. If felonious accusations are enough to demonetize--then why do the convicted felons have ads?
an example
thief / scammer Punchmade Dev
https://www.youtube.com/@punchmadedev/videos
and how I found out about it
Criminal Lawyer Reacts to Investigating the Internet's Most Famous Scammer with PunchMade Dev
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=suI1jb9PWtw