There's no clause in YouTube's terms and agreements that says a broadcaster can't touch her breasts.
But exotic entertainer Samantha Mack had one of her videos promoting a breast cancer research benefit stripped from the user-generated video site last week after it was flagged as inappropriate.
Mack says the clip, which shows her wearing a bustier then different bikini tops, was campy and shed a softer side on adult entertainment.
"The raciest thing I say is, 'tip a stripper save a tit,' " she said. "I've done other videos where I drop F-bombs and another video where I'm miming a little 'sumthin, sumthin' and they've been up for 10 months."
YouTube sent Mack an email informing her the content was deemed inappropriate but offered little clarification on what segments were too hot for the website.
The site's guidelines state, "YouTube is not for pornography or sexually explicit content. If this describes your video, even if it's a video of yourself, don't post it on YouTube." The site's main page features many videos of women bearing their cleavage for the camera.
"It would be nice to know what the line actually is," Mack said. "I have a plethora of naughty things that on one person's scale could be pretty bad and on another person's scale could be nothing."
Mack plans to continue broadcasting on YouTube despite the incident.
"The site is a great tool to promote sex-positive and women-friendly events," she said. "A video pulls people so much faster."