Dexerto: Amouranth loses 300,000 Twitch followers overnight.
https://www.dexerto.com/entertainmen...rnight-1201493
*292k. 2k left on October 24th with the other 290k on the 29th. Might have been fake accounts.
Dexerto: Amouranth loses 300,000 Twitch followers overnight.
https://www.dexerto.com/entertainmen...rnight-1201493
*292k. 2k left on October 24th with the other 290k on the 29th. Might have been fake accounts.
CourageJD to Youtube: https://twitter.com/CouRageJD/status...406446081?s=20
Spamming emotes on YouTube streams results in automated bans on the entire Google Suite. But ascii dicks are still Okay.
Was just going to post this. Gotta give it to him, his persona may be annoying but the guy gives a shit.
So a lot about of channels are pretty upset about COPPA now. Mostly gaming and toy channels are in a panic thinking they are gonna be demonetized.
Why did you post a picture of a cat(?) eating someone out.
Are you ok?
is this a rim job or cunnilingus
Pretty sure twitch has no choice but to ban someone drawing bestiality porn on stream, not sure what he was expecting lol
alecludford proposed to his extremely ill longtime girlfriend on stream and she said yes, it was actually pretty heartwarming
Now for a quick marriage and to set up a lucrative insurance plan.
https://www.bbc.com/news/technology-50733180
https://youtube.googleblog.com/2019/...nt-policy.html
YouTube updates it harassment policy targeting videos that "maliciously insult someone." Unless it comes from the Predisent.
"Even if a single video doesn't cross the line, with our new harassment policy we can take a pattern of behaviour into account for enforcement," Neal Mohan, chief product officer at YouTube, told the BBC.
As a result of the policy change, the Google-owned business also considered taking down clips of President Trump calling Democratic Senator Elizabeth Warren "Pocahontas" to taunt her over her claim that she has distant Native-American heritage.
But it decided that the president's intention was to curry favour with voters rather than attack his opponent on race and so the videos could remain online.
Prior to the change, YouTube had already banned videos that:
- contained explicit threats of violence
- bullied somebody about their appearance
- revealed somebody's personal information
- encouraged viewers to harass an individual
But the new policy also bans:
- "veiled" or implied threats of violence, such as saying "you better watch out"
- simulated violence towards an individual
- malicious insults based on protected attributes such as race, gender expression or sexual orientation
YouTube said the new policy would apply to "everyone" including politicians and popular YouTube stars as well as the general public.
Video-makers who consistently break the rules will have their ability to earn advertising revenue restricted, and may have videos deleted or their channel closed.
The company said there would be some exemptions from the new policy, including insults used in "scripted satire, stand-up comedy, or music".
Seems intended to be a response to the whole Steven Crowder thing awhile ago.
The other half of that dilemma doesn't think it'll work.
It's going to get abused to fuck. I foresee it getting used against Jim Sterling or Yong Yea among other personalities who pose themselves as consumer advocates.
I immediately thought of people like Sterling or It'sAGundam. The Prez talking that shit tho? No problem!
https://kotaku.com/microsoft-cancels...ffe-1840398186
Mixer streamer Harrisonjr has lost his partnership after tweeting that he was going to cosplay as a sex offender while playing Fortnite.
https://www.bbc.com/news/technology-50809222
https://www.kommersant.ru/doc/4196330
Russian ISP the Rambler Group is suing Twitch because users rebroadcast licenced soccer matches on the platform. The ISP is seeking $2.87B (180B rubles) in damages and for the platform to be banned in Russia.
Russia's third-largest internet company is suing streaming service Twitch for 180bn roubles (£2.1bn) over pirate broadcasts of English Premier League games.
Rambler Group alleges its exclusive broadcasting rights were breached by the service more than 36,000 times between August and November.
Russia is the third-largest user of Twitch, which has more than 15 million daily active users worldwide.
Twitch's lawyer, Julianna Tabastaeva, told Russian-language news website Kommersant Twitch "only provides users with access to the platform and is unable to change the content posted by users, or track possible violations".
She added the company took "all necessary measures to eliminate the violations, despite not receiving any official notification from Rambler".
https://amp.theguardian.com/technolo...an-ryans-world
8 yr old influencer has the highest earning channel on YouTube in 2019 at $26M.