I don’t speak English well enough but phrase “to ban” sounds like YouTube is actually going to ban, while in fact YouTube only reserves the right to ban. But the latter is not clickbaity enough.
IOW it means they can kick you off if you cost them too much money.<p>Which is fully reasonable for a private company. Unfortunately people have treated YouTube like a utility that makes them a living.<p>It would be great to see PeerTube (and other ActivityPub-based federated open-source software social networks) grow and improve to the point it is a viable replacement.
They must have already had some provision to use for those cases, right? I can't imagine that if i uploaded a 24/7 feed of a tree growing they'd have let me do that forever.