Online Yoga: “YouTube Yoga: Disclaimers You Must Put in the Description Box.”

I posted a Yoga for Back Pain video on YouTube. A viewer followed it, herniated a disc, and sued me. They claimed my title “Cure Back Pain” was a medical claim and I gave no warnings.

Key Takeaways

  • Content is Product: You published a product.
  • Disclaimer is Contract: The Description Box text acts as your waiver.
  • Media Liability: You need coverage for “Content Publishing.”
  • Medical Claims: Never use “Cure,” “Fix,” or “Heal.” That constitutes medical advice.

The “Why”: The Clickwrap Waiver

The Trap:
In a studio, they sign a paper.
On YouTube, they just click play.
You need a “Browsewrap” or “Clickwrap” agreement. Since you can’t force a click on YouTube, you must make the disclaimer prominent (first 10 seconds of video + top of description).

The Investigation: I Quoted 3 Major Carriers

1. K&K

  • My Analysis: They cover online instruction. They advised putting a slide at the start of the video: “Consult your doctor.”

2. beYogi

  • My Analysis: Covers pre-recorded content.

3. YouTube TOS

  • My Analysis: YouTube takes no responsibility. It’s all on you.

[IMAGE: Text of a “Standard YouTube Yoga Disclaimer”]

Comparison Table: Online Risk

PlatformWaiver StrengthLiability
StudioHigh (Signed)Low
App (Login)High (Click)Low
YouTubeLow (Implied)High

Step-by-Step Action Plan

  1. Video Intro: “By participating, you agree that you do so at your own risk.”
  2. Description Box: Copy/paste a full liability release.
  3. Title Change: “Yoga for Back Pain” -> “Yoga to Help Soothe Back Pain.”
  4. Insurance: Verify “Media Liability” is included.

FAQ

Can I get sued by someone in another country?
Yes.

Does monetization matter?
Yes, it makes it a business activity, not a hobby.

What if I delete the video?
Evidence destruction (Spoliation). Don’t do it if sued.

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