When TTG-ready publishers have doubts
about the appropriateness of the TTG label on a submitted video:
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1. The TTG-RP can choose to not publish the video at all
No publisher — “TTG-ready” or otherwise — is ever obligated to do anything with TTG or to publish TTG-labeled videos.
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2. The TTG-RP can make any changes allowed by the Trust Test
. . . that are deemed necessary to making the video TTG-eligible.
The Trust Test
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3. The TTG-RP can tell the video’s creator that they will not publish the TTG label with the video as it was submitted.
The video creator then has three choices:
A. the video’s creator can undo any problematic areas in the video until the TTG-RP no longer thinks the TTG label is inappropriate; or
B. the video’s creator can remove the TTG label and have the video published without the label (should that solution be acceptable to the TTG-RP); or
C. the video’s creator can withdraw the submission so that the video is not published by that TTG-RP.
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4. If the TTG-RP believes that the video meets V1–V7 of the Trust Test but cannot meet V8 because it does not depict what it appears to depict...
(The Trust Test)
. . . the TTG-RP can tell the video’s creator that they will not publish the video unless the TTG-IC version of the label is used, as per #3 here (or unless the “IC” explanation is expanded, if that alert is already there).
The video’s creator then has similar choices to #3 above.
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5. The TTG-RP can publish the video with the TTG label and the video creator’s name or UOI...
(UOI?)
. . . reminding viewers that the video’s creator— not the TTG-RP — is always fully and solely responsible for the appropriateness of the TTG label.
This page is linked to #102 in the list of
Publishers’ rights and responsibilities
