
"Just seeing this and how it's affecting people is making me so mad that I am losing my ability to give anybody the benefit of the doubt here."

"There's probably many of you watching out here that have been affected by this, please I want you to know I'm working on it, they're working on it, but goddamn I'm just as mad as you are," Fischbach said in the video. Not only were people's YouTube and Google accounts suspended for "spamming" the emotes at Fischbach's request (he asked for fans to vote using red or green emotes), but Fischbach showed seven screenshots of fans who appealed the suspensions and were denied again by the platform's content moderators. Mark "Markiplier" Fischbach uploaded an explosive criticism of YouTube on Friday after he said "hundreds" of his fans were unjustly banned from YouTube and Google for simply commenting too many emotes, YouTube's emojis, in a row on one of Fischbach's livestreams. Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.In a response on Twitter, Fischbach added that "I understand that transparency isn't usually YouTube's mode of operation, but when the problem runs this deep you have to give us the why or people won't trust your platform.".On Twitter, the account told Fischbach "the accounts have been reinstated," and a representative for YouTube told Business Insider that "a number" of the accounts were reinstated while YouTube continues to investigate what happened.

