Before You File a YouTube Complaint — Read This

Let’s clear this up once and for all: if you ever feel the urge to file a YouTube complaint about a Zoom call you joined with us (whether it’s a paid Quick Audit, Power Hour, a free consultation, or a training), pause—because by joining that call, you already consented to being recorded.

“By continuing, you consent to being recorded.”

We record everything.

Not because we’re sneaky, but because we repurpose these calls as part of the 4-stage Content Factory process to help people become more Googleable.


We turn clips into training material, social snippets, and case studies that build credibility for you and help others learn from real examples.

Turning Flax Dental‘s call into an article
Repurposing Awad Law Firm‘s video on our site

If you want something removed, fine.

Stuff changes. People change. Maybe you said something you regret, or maybe you just don’t want your name out there.

No problem; just email Operations, and we’ll take care of it as a courtesy.

What’s not fine?

Filing a privacy complaint with YouTube.

That’s like calling the cops because you didn’t like how your photo turned out.

It’s overkill and it actually puts our entire channel under review.

That means hundreds of educational videos and years of work get flagged because someone couldn’t be bothered to send a simple message first.

We give our time freely to help business owners. Filing a complaint instead of communicating is unprofessional.

So here’s the deal:

  • Joining a Zoom call = you consented to recording.
  • Recordings are used to make you and others more visible online.
  • If you want it down, ask Operations; don’t nuke our channel.
  • Filing complaints hurts everyone, including yourself.

We’re all adults here.

A quick email solves everything.

Let’s handle things professionally, not with panic buttons.

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