Yes, YouTubers do get money from the YouTube videos even if they are most disliked videos on YouTube.
No. Likes and dislikes do not effect your channel earnings in any way. YouTube partners program runs ads on your videos and the number of views can impact your earnings not dislikes.
Though the debate is far from over, creators can rest assured that their viewership won't be affected by swarms of dislikes. According to Wojcicki and internal YouTube research, dislikes don't have a meaningful impact on viewership—and there are real-world examples supporting the findings.
YouTube doesn't pay for the number of likes on a video. However, the likes convince the YouTube algorithm to push a channel forward. The average rate of the CPM is the average rate for 1000 ad views.
If a user watched your video completely, and then hit the thumbs down, the system will still consider your video as the one that holds the attention of them – and thus a dislike won't affect your exposure on the platform. Dislikes are a huge analytical instrument in the arsenal of YouTube content categorization.
As of July 9, 2021, YouTube Rewind 2018 has over 7.1 million more dislikes than Justin Bieber's Baby. In March 2011, "Baby", which then had 1.17 million dislikes, was surpassed by the video for Rebecca Black's "Friday", yielding more than 1.2 million dislikes.
On the downside, YouTube saw that dislike counts were “harming parts of our ecosystem through dislike attacks as people actively worked to drive up the number of dislikes on a creator's videos,” the CEO wrote, and such attacks often targeted smaller creators and those just getting started.
Overlay ads (small ads at the bottom of a video) - you only get paid if a viewer clicks on the ad to expand it. Skippable video ads (ads at the start of a video that a viewer can skip after five seconds) - you get paid if a viewer watches the whole ad (or at least 30 seconds if it's longer).
Using Forbes's estimated pay rate of $5 per 1,000 views, a YouTube video with 1,000,000 views can make upward of $5,000, which makes being a modern-day influencer a pretty lucrative job!
Between $120 and $800 per 100,000 views
Some people won't be as engaged — more of them will only watch short clips of your videos or stop watching altogether once they see an ad. So it's reasonable to assume that your CPM for video views would go down to somewhere between $1.2 and $8, or $120 to $800 per 100,000 views.
Channels will lose monetization if they violate any of the YouTube channel monetization policies, regardless of their subscriber count, public watch hours, or public Shorts views.
Do your own views count on YouTube? Yes, your own views count if you play your own YouTube video — but only if you do it once or twice, not if you constantly refresh the page.
The primary reason not to buy YouTube subscribers is that it violates YouTube's Community Guidelines. YouTube doesn't allow anyone to buy or sell YouTube accounts, channels, or videos. If you're caught doing any of these activities, your channel will be immediately terminated without any prior notice.
So for a major-label song on YouTube that generates 1 billion views across all videos that use it, the label and artist would generate closer to $2.1 million.
Google pays out 68% of their AdSense revenue, so for every $100 an advertiser pays, Google pays $68 to the publisher. The actual rates an advertiser pays varies, usually between $0.10 to $0.30 per view, but averages out at $0.18 per view. On Average, the YouTube channel can receive $18 per 1,000 ad views.
YouTubers are paid out monthly and either receive a check by mail or direct deposit. To start earning money from YouTube, creators must have at least 1,000 subscribers and 4,000 watch hours in the past year. Once they reach that threshold, they can apply for YouTube's Partner Program.
YouTube can only pay out royalties if a video has been claimed by an advertisement (monetized). If it hasn't been monetized before, there are simply no retroactive royalties to share.
To start earning money directly from YouTube, creators must have at least 1,000 subscribers and 4,000 watch hours in the past year. Once they reach that threshold, they can apply for YouTube's Partner Program, which allows creators to start monetizing their channels through ads, subscriptions, and channel memberships.
YouTube announces Shorts will soon be eligible for monetization, and creators will keep 45% of the revenue generated from viewership. This is a significant update for creators who earn income on YouTube. Unlike long-form videos, which allow creators to profit from ad revenue, Shorts has no direct path to monetization.
Creators will still be able to find their exact dislike counts in YouTube Studio, along with other existing metrics, if they would like to understand how their content is performing.
Ratings (ie likes/dislikes) are anonymous. You can NOT find out who liked or disliked your videos.
Dislike separates the good from the bad.
In fact, in many cases of "content," a dislike option is largely the only tool that lets the public decide for itself. Of course, platforms have their checks against harmful content and usually ban it almost immediately.
Yes; they count as engagement. All engagement, whether that be likes, dislikes, comments, or shares count in YouTube's algorithm. Videos with higher engagement are more likely to be promoted by YouTube's algorithm in suggested and recommended video feeds.