Twitch was temporary suspended account of streamer Quqco for violating the “sexual content or activity” regulations. The suspension comes after a stream last weekend in which the streamer cosplayed as Chun-Li from Street Fighter. According to Kotaku news (as well as common understanding among Street Fighter fans), Chun-Li’s outfit is designed with a thigh-high slit. But Quqco She said she “bought a larger size to make sure the slit wasn’t too high”.
Quqco also replied to Kotaku that the suspension was due to “a group of trolls” who had repeatedly targeted her. “I was immediately reported because they considered me a whore.”
Quqco was previously banned in August after cosplaying Mai Shiranui in King of Fighters, according to the streamer, the cause of the incident was also the result of an online campaign targeting female streamer performed by members of the LivestreamFail subreddit.
LivestreamFail moderators have denied their member interactions with Quqco’s most recent livestreams. But according to Kotaku, a member of the group commented on a deleted post saying “Lmao, I saw her streaming again today and reported it immediately.”
One of the biggest challenges facing streamers is Twitch’s unclear regulations on sexually suggestive content. Any sexually suggestive content is generally prohibited, but Twitch will “consider the intent and context of the content based on a number of specific factors, but not limited to” the following:
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How to behave and comment.
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React to content, such as chat messages from broadcast channels, moderators, and allowed chat messages in the community.
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Costumes and environments, such as location and background music, props, etc.
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Camera placement, angle and focus.
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Stream and vid properties such as title, intro/end, custom thumbnail, and other data.
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Profiles and channel assets, such as banners, profile images, emojis, and dashboards.
The foregoing explains the lack of regulation regarding dress code, specifically as Twitch expands its content offerings, the “need to update the range of appropriate clothing” also changes:
“For example, clothing acceptable for a beach or gym broadcast may not be acceptable for a cooking or gaming broadcast. In an effort to help streamers adhere to the Community Guidelines how they expect real-world behavior, we’ve updated our policies to reflect that we’ll consider not only the dress, but the context of wear and the wearer’s intentions when auditing. Browse content. Sexual content, such as nudity or focus on genitals, buttocks or nipples, and suggestive clothing are prohibited.”
Temporarily leaving aside the question of who defines “sexual intent”, in fact, a part of streamers on Twitch still regularly wear revealing clothes. Quqco expressed disappointment at the flurry of Twitch’s bans on sexually suggestive content, and the consequences of abuse of the ban in a series of tweets posted the day before the streamer was suspended. .
The entire video of the stream is no longer available on Twitch, so the real reason for this streamer’s suspension will be updated by Emergenceingame.Com in another article.
Source link: Streamer gets banned because Cosplay Chun-Li is too sexy
– Emergenceingames.com