Paul didn't seem to learn from his mistakes or the punishment as, after a brief pause on uploading videos, he returned with a controversial video where
he tasered a dead rat on camera.
At Recode's Code Media conference in Huntington Beach, California, YouTube CEO Susan Wojcicki said Paul's videos — one of which shows
him tasering a dead rat — showed «a pattern of egregious behavior,» but that he hasn't violated the company's «three strikes» policy.
YouTube says his infractions include trying to monetize a video that violates the company's advertiser - friendly guidelines, encouraging his followers to do the Tide Pod challenge, and, in one recent video, taking a fish out of his pond to jokingly give it CPR and then
tasering a dead rat.
Not exact matches
Last week, YouTube temporarily suspended paid advertising on Paul's page and removed him from Google's Preferred Ads program after he uploaded a video of himself
tasering two
dead rats.
The vlogger added fuel to the flames last week when he uploaded a video where he is seen
tasering two
dead rats and removing a live fish from water.
Logan Paul added fuel to the flames last week when he uploaded a video where he is seen
tasering two
dead rats and removing a live fish from water.
Earlier this month, it suspended all ads from videos of one of its biggest stars, Logan Paul, after he posted video showing a suicide victim in Japan and a later one in which he used a
Taser on a
dead rat.
Wojcicki was responding to a question from interviewer Kara Swisher about why YouTube hadn't simply banned Paul in response to his video from Japan, which he subsequently apologized for, and a later video in which he shot a
Taser at a
dead rat.