YouTube announced on Thursday that creators whose channels were previously terminated will be able to request new accounts.

“We know many terminated creators deserve a second chance – YouTube has evolved and changed over the past 20 years, and we’ve had our share of second chances to get things right with our community too,” YouTube wrote in a blog post.

This change in policy, which YouTube is calling a “pilot,” didn’t come out of nowhere. Rep. Jim Jordan (R-OH) had subpoenaed YouTube’s parent company, Alphabet, to investigate if the Biden-Harris administration had “coerced or colluded” platforms into censoring speech. Last month, Alphabet’s legal counsel, Daniel F. Donovan, wrote in a letter to Rep. Jordan that the company would allow some terminated creators to come back.

While

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