
The post YouTube Bans Bitcoin.com: Latest Strike in War on Crypto Content appeared first on Coinpedia Fintech News
Video streaming platform YouTube has deleted the high-profile (100,000+ subscribers) and decade-old channel Bitcoin.com out of the blue, claiming its content is βharmful and dangerous.β
In retaliation, Bitcoin.com insisted it has always posted educational content about Bitcoin (BTC), including wallet tutorials and objective news. It also called out YouTubeβs AI for unfairness in moderation, saying βcrypto scam ads run 24/7 with zero moderation.β
The platform now laments that YouTube has rejected its appeals, causing its visitor count to dwindle due to broken video embeds.

Source: X
YouTube Ban Targets Bitcoin and Crypto Channels
Similar channels that received comparable deletions in the past include BTCsessions, which YouTube deplatformed three times between 2019 and 2025. The accountβs most recent ousting for βsevere and repeated violationsβ was lifted shortly after widespread community backlash.
In September 2025, the Luke Mikic Bitcoin-focused page suffered the same fate, but YouTube lifted the restriction on the same day following a rapid appeal.
In early 2026, YouTube initiated a wave of profile purges, including several well-publicized crypto-focused channels. Outlaws lost a collective 35 million subscribers while demonetization cost them millions of dollars in revenue. April 2026 saw the expulsion of Bitcoin Magazine for βlow-quality and repetitive contentβ β its second ban in four years.
Community Reaction
While YouTube remains silent on the recent blacklisting, its CEO, Neal Mohan, has reiterated the platformβs creator-first approach. Nonetheless, crypto YouTube viewership dropped to a five-year low in 2026 as retail interest faded.Β
The X community has largely supported crypto YouTubers, saying claims of policy violations were false and that bans should be a last resort, given that they affect peopleβs livelihoods.Β
Responses also encourage seeking alternative ways to reach oneβs audience, including Odysee, email lists, Substack, Spotify, Rumble, and decentralized messaging apps.
In the latter category is Jack Dorseyβs Bitchat and similar Dorsey-supported platforms like Nostr and Bluesky. While still in its experimentation phase, Bitchat fosters communication independent of control from centralized organizations, the internet infrastructure, and service providers.Β

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