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YouTube has revealed that it would soon begin monetizing Shorts with advertisements in order to compete with trending short videos like tiktok and insta.
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The digital behemoth has declared that it will pay creators a portion of the money made from YouTube Shorts.
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shorts-focused producers will be able to apply to YPP beginning in early 2023 by reaching a threshold of 1,000 subscribers and 10M shorts views over a 90-day period.
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New partners will benefit from everything their program has to offer, including the numerous revenue streams like long-form adverts and fan funding.
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Now, creators may get reasonably priced, premium music licenses that provide them complete monetization possibilities.
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Creators will be able to use tracks and split profits with the track's artist and other related rights holders if they don't want to purchase a license up front.
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45% of the profits, divided according to their percentage of all Shorts views. Whether they use music or not, the income split does not change.
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