Community Guidelines Enforcement — Channel Takedowns
YouTube ban service that gets rule-breakers terminated
We report YouTube channels that break the Community Guidelines or copyright — and move them toward strikes and termination through YouTube's own official reporting and copyright tools.
A YouTube ban service — also called a youtube channel ban service — is a managed reporting workflow that documents how a channel breaks the Community Guidelines or copyright, then files that evidence through YouTube's official channels until strikes land or the channel is terminated. We act only on genuine violations: scam and impersonation channels, stolen content, harassment and spam — never legitimate creators.
- 1Strike 1 — Impersonation & scam links
- 2Strike 2 — Re-uploaded copyrighted videos
- 3Strike 3 — Channel terminated
Filed through YouTube's official reporting + copyright channels with timestamps and source links.
The strike system
How does YouTube's strike system work?
YouTube enforces its Community Guidelines through a graduated strike system — and the quality of a report decides whether it lands.
A channel's first offence usually brings a one-time warning with no penalty. After that, each Community Guidelines violation adds a strike: strike 1 freezes uploads and live features for a week, strike 2 for two weeks, and a third strike within 90 days terminates the channel. Strikes expire 90 days after they are issued. Copyright runs on a separate three-strike track, and the most severe violations can trigger immediate termination without any strikes at all. You can read the official rules in YouTube's Community Guidelines strikes basics. A youtube channel ban service exists to file the version reviewers act on — the correct guideline or copyright basis, timestamps and source links — so a genuine violation is judged on evidence, not volume.
Process
How our YouTube ban service builds a case
Four steps, and we only move forward when there is a real Community Guidelines or copyright breach.
Qualify
We check the channel against the specific guideline or copyright rule it appears to break before we take it on.
Document
We capture video URLs, channel handles, timestamps and source links into one evidence file tied to that rule.
Report
We submit it through YouTube's official reporting flow — or the copyright webform when the rights holder files.
Escalate
We track the strike decision and add evidence or re-file if the first review comes up short.
What we report
What we report on YouTube
Each case is screened for a genuine Community Guidelines or copyright breach first. See all solutions →
Scam & impersonation channels
Fake giveaways, "send crypto, get double back" cons and channels posing as a real celebrity or brand.
Stolen & re-uploaded content
Channels re-uploading your videos or others' work, reported through YouTube's copyright takedown process.
Harassment & cyberbullying
Sustained targeting, threats and bullying in videos or comments that breach the harassment policy.
Spam & deceptive practices
Sub-bots, fake engagement, repetitive uploads and misleading metadata that violate the spam policy.
Dangerous & illegal content
Harmful or clearly illegal videos; severe cases are escalated to the proper authorities, not treated as a takedown alone.
Impersonation of you or your brand
Cloned channels using your name, avatar or logo to mislead viewers, reported under the impersonation policy.
Two separate tracks
Copyright strikes vs Community Guideline strikes
YouTube runs two distinct three-strike systems. They are counted separately, and they are filed in different places.
Community Guidelines strikes
Issued when a channel breaks a content policy — scams, harassment, spam, dangerous content. Three within 90 days terminate the channel, and each strike expires after 90 days. These are filed through YouTube's in-product reporting tools.
Copyright strikes
Issued only when the genuine rights holder files a valid copyright takedown — through the copyright webform or Content ID. Three copyright strikes also terminate a channel. We never file a copyright claim unless you actually own the work.
How we work
Genuine violations only
We never touch a legitimate channel — only content that clearly breaks the Community Guidelines, copyright or the law.
Official channels only
Every case runs through YouTube's own reporting, copyright and appeal tools. No exploits, no shortcuts.
Copyright filed by the rights holder
A copyright takedown is only valid from the genuine owner, so we file one solely when you hold the rights to the work.
FAQ
Questions, answered
Straight answers about the youtube channel ban service — and where we draw the line.
What is a YouTube ban service?
A YouTube ban service — also called a youtube channel ban service — is a managed reporting workflow that documents how a channel breaks YouTube's Community Guidelines or copyright, then files that evidence through YouTube's official reporting and copyright tools so the channel can earn strikes or be terminated. It acts only on genuine violations, never legitimate channels.
Can you get any YouTube channel terminated?
No. We only report channels that clearly break the Community Guidelines, copyright or the law — scam and impersonation channels, stolen re-uploads, harassment and deceptive spam. We decline requests against legitimate channels, and we never run coordinated mass-reporting, because YouTube discounts inauthentic report floods and reviews each case on its merits.
How long does it take to terminate a YouTube channel?
It depends on the violation and the channel's strike history. A first offence usually brings a one-time warning, then graduated strikes, while a severe breach such as egregious harm can trigger immediate termination. Reviews often land within a few days, and a channel is terminated once it reaches three Community Guidelines strikes in 90 days or three copyright strikes.
Do you guarantee the channel is banned?
No honest service can promise an outcome — only YouTube decides. What we control is the report itself: the correct Community Guideline or copyright basis, dated evidence and timestamped source links, filed through official channels. That is what gives a genuine violation its best realistic chance of a strike or termination.
How do I start?
Message us on Telegram (@EliteSolutionExpertSupport) or WhatsApp (+44 7961 978527) with the channel URL and a short note on which guideline or copyright issue it breaks. We check whether it genuinely breaks the rules and map out the reporting route before any work starts.
Ready to report a YouTube channel?
Send the channel URL and a short description. If it's a genuine Community Guidelines or copyright breach, we'll map the official reporting path with you — no mass-reporting, ever.