Justin Timberlake’s music video for “Tunnel Vision” features nude women, and after an initial ban from YouTube the website has backtracked on its decision because of the artistic vision.

The “Tunnel Vision” music video, for the single on Timberlake’s The 20/20 Experience, features the male singer clothed while several nude women dance in separate scenes topless.

Certain types of nudity, including topless women, are never allowed on YouTube even with an age-restriction warning. But YouTube decided to un-ban the video citing an artistic license.

“While our Guidelines generally prohibit nudity, we make exceptions when it is presented in an educational, documentary or artistic context, and take care to add appropriate warnings and age-restrictions,” YouTube said in a statement to ABC News.

You can watch Justin Timberlake’s “Tunnel Vision” music video below:

The flip flop raises questions about what’s appropriate for a general audience on YouTube. With Timberlake being a well-connected young adult who has countless connections around the entertainment industry, it doesn’t surprise us that he was able to sway Google and YouTube into adding his video back.

There’s also this problem: Did “Tunnel Vision” need nude women dancing in it? No, and the addition may’ve been a way for Timberlake to pull in more viewers who wanted to catch up on any potential controversy. This video also stirred the pot because it depicts women as sex objects.

The news comes in light of another recent music video, Robin Thicke’s “Blurred Lines,” which features a heavy amount of female nudity. Unlike Timberlake’s video, Thicke’s has been banned from YouTube since March.