Copyright Strikes Are Out of Control

TL;DR: How to Protect Your Channel from Strikes

Claims = nuisance (someone else gets the money).

Copyright Strikes = legal risk (3 = channel termination).

Community Strikes = platform risk (3 = termination under YouTube's rules).

Demonetization = business risk (ads shut off across your channel).

Fair Use won't stop a strike on YouTube - it only applies in court.

The fix: Register your videos & thumbnails, trademark your name/logo, keep proof of ownership, and diversify your revenue.


Every week, my inbox fills with the same story.

A strike lands. A video disappears. A channel is on the edge of being shut down.

Creators are panicked and scared.

Strikes don't all look the same. Some are filed by trolls looking for a payout. Some come from competitors trying to slow you down. Some are triggered automatically by the platform.

But once you understand where they come from, you can protect yourself before they land.

The IP Vultures Are Real

One creator I worked with was blindsided by an IP troll.

The troll claimed ownership of clips buried in old reaction videos. Not even new uploads. Videos from years ago.

The message was simple: Pay up. Or risk the channel.

We pushed back, and it took months of negotiation and legal expense to resolve.

That creator could absorb the cost. But most can't.

And this is the problem: trolls know the system favors speed and pressure.

But here's the flip side.

Another creator I advised faced a similar demand. A troll threatened strikes, but when pressed for proof of ownership, they couldn't provide any. The claim fell apart.

The difference? The creator had enough documentation and leverage to call their bluff.

Why YouTube Won't Save You

YouTube's role is not to protect creators. Their role is to protect themselves from liability.

Under the DMCA, they are required to remove content when they receive a valid takedown notice and then forward that notice to the creator.

That's it. They don't investigate the truth. They don't stand between you and a bad actor.

This is why IP trolls thrive. They know the platform will comply first and ask questions later.

By the way, I love YouTube. They are the best platform next to LinkedIn and they can no longer help (they used to) because there are millions of claims each day. The sheer volume is insane. YouTube wants creators to succeed because of reasons I will cover in a future letter but they cannot help with strikes because as they say: "that is legal and we cannot touch legal."

The Fair Use Reality

Fair use is real. Courts have upheld it many times.

But here's the challenge: it only comes alive in litigation. It doesn't prevent a takedown on YouTube. It doesn't stop a troll from filing a strike.

That doesn't mean you're helpless. It means prevention matters more than cure. Clean catalogs. Clear contracts. Proper registrations. And always keep documentation within reach.

This is how you shift the leverage back to you.

The Bigger Picture I'm Seeing

I believe I am the early warning system for what's happening to creators.

Because I work with hundreds of them, from those just starting to those with audiences in the tens of millions, I see the patterns before they hit the headlines.

And right now, the risks are multiplying:

Copyright Registration: I now register both videos and even thumbnails for clients with the U.S. Copyright Office. Why? Because when your work is registered, you can actually enforce your rights in court and recover statutory damages. Without registration, your rights are paper-thin.

Trademarks: I trademark creator names, logos, and even profile photos. Why? Because when a copycat channel pops up (and they will) platforms respond faster to takedowns if you own the trademark. It's proof of brand identity, not just content ownership.

Copycat Channels: These are exploding. Entire accounts built to mimic, impersonate, and siphon revenue from real creators. Some even run ads against stolen content. Without registrations and trademarks in place, fighting back is slow, expensive, and often ineffective.

What I know: the same forces that hurt creators today are warning signs for where the industry is heading tomorrow.

And that's why I write these letters.

Claims vs. Strikes vs. Community Guidelines vs. Demonetization

A quick reset because these terms get thrown around all the time:

Claims (Content ID)

Triggered automatically by YouTube's Content ID system. The copyright holder can block the video, track analytics, or monetize it themselves. Annoying, but not lethal.

Copyright Strikes (DMCA Takedowns)

Filed by a copyright owner under the DMCA. Video removed. Strike on your record. Three strikes = channel termination. This is the biggest legal risk.

Community Guideline Strikes

Issued directly by YouTube for breaking its rules. Things like spam, harassment, or "reused content." Not tied to copyright law at all. But just like DMCA strikes, three = channel termination. And one strike can already limit features like livestreaming or monetization.

Demonetization (AdSense Suspension)

YouTube shuts off ads across your entire channel. It doesn't matter if you have strikes or not. If they decide you aren't "brand safe," revenue stops.

Know the difference:

A claim costs you money.

A copyright strike risks your channel.

A community strike risks your channel in a different way, at the platform's discretion.

And demonetization threatens your entire business.

The Fallout of Losing Your Channel

Imagine waking up to the email:

Your channel is gone. Years of uploads, deleted. AdSense, shut off. Brand deals, canceled. Your income, gone overnight.

I've spoken with creators who felt their entire world collapse in a single click.

And the truth is, recovery is brutal. You can appeal. You can escalate. You can file a counter-notification. But it is slow, uncertain, and risky.

By the time the system catches up, your business may already be gone.

The Good News

You are not powerless.

The same system trolls exploit can be turned to your advantage if you prepare early.

Creators who register their content, trademark their brand, and keep proof of ownership are building businesses that last.

I see creators every day protecting themselves, winning deals, and licensing their catalogs for real money.

This isn't about fear. It's about control. And you have more of it than you realize.

What You Can Do Now

Here is what I tell every creator:

Register your content with the U.S. Copyright Office. Yes, videos and thumbnails.

Trademark your channel name and profile image. It's your fastest weapon against impersonators.

Use clean B-roll and licensed music. Keep receipts.

Avoid reaction content as your main format. It is legally fragile.

Keep proof of ownership. Store your licenses, receipts, and contracts in one place.

Diversify revenue. YouTube is a platform, not your business model.

Move your fans to your own list. If your channel goes dark, your community should not.

Protection is not about fighting after the fact.

Protection is about building safeguards before disaster strikes.


Creators, you are not at the mercy of trolls or copycats. You can take steps today to protect your business and your livelihood.

Because you are not just making videos.

You are building an empire.

And empires must be defended.

With love, Tyler The Creators' Attorney

Content is King. IP is Queen.