As part of its ongoing campaign against ad-blockers, YouTube appears to be crusade films short before they even begin. Yes, users of these programs have reported that YouTube is cutting videos short before they even start.

Although many have discussed the issue of videos on YouTube skipping to the end, and the majority of them have an ad-blocker enabled on your machine, denying them the opportunity to watch the entire video seems like a bold and aggressive move that is unlikely to sit well with users and regulators equally. YouTube has not officially commented on the changes, and we don’t expect that to change anytime soon.

The firm has frequently stated that employing an ad-blocker is unnecessary because to the continuous stream of advertisements that free users must endure on the network.

YouTube, however, claims that its revenue stream from advertisements enables it to pay its creators. Therefore, YouTube advises paying for its premium subscription and permanently forgetting about adverts if you wish to use the site going forward and don’t want advertisements.

Regarding the most recent problem with ad-blockers, we independently confirmed that the entire video played on YouTube without pausing while we had the ad-blocker turned on. Therefore, it’s probable that some of these people were having problems as a result of the ad-blocker itself, but until more information is available, we are unable to determine the exact reason.

The Endless Battle Between YouTube And Ad-Blockers:

When YouTube first launched the experiment, it had a three-strike policy for videos. This gave users plenty of time to stop using ad blockers and allow advertisements to appear on all videos on their profile, if they still wanted to use YouTube for free.

You will mainly see two choices if you come across YouTube’s new pop-up, which shows up when it detects an ad blocker on your system: “allow YouTube ads” or just “try YouTube Premium.” Additionally, the page states that until YouTube has been approved or the ad filter is turned off, “video playback is blocked.”

Since YouTube now limits its use on browsers, these changes have already caused problems for ad blocking firms, who have reportedly seen thousands of users give up the apps. The majority of users who have stopped using ad blockers have been watching YouTube through the Chrome browser.