YouTube U-turn after protests over verified status Published duration 23 September 2019 Related Topics Social media regulation debate

image copyright Getty Images image caption YouTubers said removing the verification mark would harm their standing on the video site

YouTube has reversed a decision that would have stripped many popular video-streamers of a "verified" status badge.

The proposed change was supposed to make the ID check more rigorous and help weed out impersonators.

When it was first introduced the "verified" badge was designed to be a guarantee of identity to help people searching for a specific person, organisation or channel. The badge was given to YouTube channels with more than 100,000 subscribers.

But the company said it had become an endorsement of content rather than just an ID check and was in need of reform.

Authority and longevity

Under the change, only "prominent channels that have a clear need for proof of authenticity" would be verified, while many others would lose the mark.

The threatened removal prompted widespread protests by established YouTubers, many of whom said the verification mark helped them establish their authority and longevity on the site.

But on 20 September, YouTube announced it was largely reversing the changes it had proposed.

"We heard loud and clear how much the badge means to you," it said in a blog.

All those channels that currently have the verification badge will keep them, but in future badges will not automatically be bestowed on channels that cross the 100,000-subscriber mark.