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The Internet Crime Social Networks Games

Twitch Will Ban Users For 'Severe Misconduct' That Occurs Away From Its Site (reuters.com) 320

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Reuters: Live-streaming service Twitch will ban users for offenses such as hate-group membership or credible threats of mass violence that occur entirely away from the site, in a new approach to moderating the platform, the company said on Wednesday. The Amazon-owned platform, which is popular among video gamers, said under its new rules it would take enforcement actions against offline offenses that posed a "substantial safety risk" to its community.

It said examples of this "severe misconduct" include terrorist activities, child sexual exploitation, violent extremism, credible threats of mass violence, carrying out or deliberately acting as an accomplice to sexual assault and threatening Twitch or its staff. "Taking action against misconduct that occurs entirely off our service is a novel approach for both Twitch and the industry at large, but it's one we believe -- and hear from you -- is crucial to get right," the company said in a blog post. The company said users will be able to report such behaviors but it may also investigate cases proactively, for instance if there is a verified news report that a user has been arrested. Twitch said it would rely more heavily on law enforcement in "off-service" cases and is partnering with an investigative law firm to support its internal team. It declined to name the firm. The new standards will apply even if the target of the offline behaviors is not a Twitch user or if the perpetrator was not a user when they committed the acts. Perpetrators would also be banned from registering a Twitch account, it said.

Twitch said it would take action only when there was evidence, such as screen shots, videos of off-Twitch behavior or police filings, verified by its internal team or third-party investigators. Users who submit a large amount of frivolous reports will face suspension. The company said in cases where the behavior happened in the distant past, users had gone through rehabilitation such as time in a correctional facility, and they no longer presented a danger to the community, it might not take action or might reinstate users on appeal. It said it would share updates with the involved parties but would not share public updates about actions under this policy.

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Twitch Will Ban Users For 'Severe Misconduct' That Occurs Away From Its Site

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  • Great (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Jarwulf ( 530523 ) on Wednesday April 07, 2021 @11:37PM (#61249512)
    in addition to policing your behavior on site they're going to spy on you and get snitches to monitor your behavior everywhere else too. For 'severe' misconduct only of course /s. Of course this won't apply to all the hate speech racism and sexism and animal abuse etc perpetuated by their favored class of booby streaming thots.
    • Re:Great (Score:5, Insightful)

      by OrangeTide ( 124937 ) on Wednesday April 07, 2021 @11:54PM (#61249562) Homepage Journal

      Fail to curate your public image then you fail at PR. And reasonably Twitch has no interest in continuing the business relationship.

      I guess if we wanted a public commons that gave us a fair and open platform for free speech, we shouldn't be expecting it from barely regulated social media corporations.

      • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

        by sinij ( 911942 )

        Fail to curate your public image then you fail at PR. And reasonably Twitch has no interest in continuing the business relationship.

        I don't know if you intended to parody extreme libertarian views, or actually believe this nonsense, or commenting on a different story. Here we are talking about Twitch and streamers. This is the kind of "business relationship" that Amazon workers pissing into bottles have with Amazon. You are a radical if you think that Twitch dictating terms to powerless streamers could be considered a business relationship.

    • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

      by LenKagetsu ( 6196102 )

      The only time these policies are acceptable is if the ban reason is a link to the public record that details your conviction.

    • Highly doubt they will get snitches, those snitches arent free, its simply not worth the cost. Each person on each social media platform is only worth a few dollars a year, its simply not worth spending an hour or two every few weeks or months to do anything like monitor that person. Its the same reason why Google has no humans to contact. Google doesnt care about you as a person because its not worth the cost of having a human to keep your business for any reason.
      • You are saying that there are not anonymous people on the internet who will gleefully take public figures and/or wannabe celebrities down?

        It's easier and less risky than trolling, and at least as rewarding.

        • > You are saying that there are not anonymous people on the internet who will gleefully take public figures and/or wannabe celebrities down?
          Yeh im sure that system works well. How did tht work in the communist world ?
          • I think you're missing the point here. What do you think this new regulation is to achieve? Business revenue for Twitch?

            Twitch is currently managed by people who are best buddies with the most rabid cancel culture representatives.

            To use your communist world metaphor, It's not a noble, idealistic proletarian turning to fellow comrades to stay vigilant and report reactionary element. It's a sadistic comissar who just loves torturing people, giving out suggestions of what kind of common behaviors are e

  • by Joe_Dragon ( 2206452 ) on Wednesday April 07, 2021 @11:40PM (#61249520)

    and after false arrest? or found not guilty?

    • I assume false arrest would be fine but found not guilty would depend on the specifics.

      For example, if you're tried for a crime, but innocent, but are found to be a Neo Nazi that advocates for the extermination of the disabled in the course of the investigation you'll probably still be banned (this is an extreme case example trying to illustrate that guilt of a crime is definitely not the bar they are going for).

    • and after false arrest? or found not guilty?

      Affluent white people are highly unlikely to be arrested, and this is who they're catering to. If you're arrested, it means you're not one of them.

      Who care if you're guilty?

  • by bobstreo ( 1320787 ) on Wednesday April 07, 2021 @11:56PM (#61249576)

    to support union organization for various Amazon employee groups.

    Slippery slope is slippery and slopey

  • by Malays2 bowman ( 6656916 ) on Thursday April 08, 2021 @12:14AM (#61249632)

    This is the kind of crap I've heard about grade schools pulling. That includes creepy stalking of students through social media sites, without any justification (such as a shooting threat) for doing so.

      I wonder if these companies are now trying to implement a "social credit" system, like China.

    Cappie or Commie, the end result's more or less the same.

  • First Amendment (Score:2, Interesting)

    by Lord Apathy ( 584315 )

    So, do you people still think extending first amendment rights to cover social media is still outrageous?

    • Re:First Amendment (Score:5, Insightful)

      by mcnster ( 2043720 ) on Thursday April 08, 2021 @01:38AM (#61249810)

      There is a common misconception regarding the granting of rights in the amendments of the US Constitution.

      Namely, the "rights" granted (or in the case of the First Amendment, rescinded) are the rights of government not a granting of rights to the People. The Constitution is quite specific that any rights not granted to government by the document are reserved by the People as endowed by their Creator (whoever that may be).

      So, as a Person, the First Amendment does not "grant" any rights to you that you didn't have before--rather, it specifically forbids the government from making "any law abridging freedom of speech" yadda yadda yadda. Ditto for the 2nd Amendment, and the following eight amendments.

      Please get this right. It is important.

      • Wow, first, if you want to pedant, get it right.

        The Constitution is quite specific that any rights not granted to government by the document are reserved by the People as endowed by their Creator

        No, it's not. I'd like to see that line, because other than using the words "rights" and "the people", I don't see anything familiar. In fact, that general point isn't made at all.

        Now that we see how strangely you missed GP's point when he talked about extending the first amendment rights, did you somehow think th

    • It already covers that. Social media can't pass laws, therefore they can't pass laws abridging freedom of speech. Oh wait, did you think terms of service policies were laws?
    • by nagora ( 177841 )

      It does cover social media and if the USG tries to close down someone on social media then we'll see what happens.

  • It's a social credit system managed by gamers, and Twitch staff will only have to intervene in cases of egregious abuse.

  • by BAReFO0t ( 6240524 ) on Thursday April 08, 2021 @12:50AM (#61249710)

    Good thing Twitch is one of the most unnecessary things in all of human history forever.

    Actually, banning people from their is doing them a favor. Like being banned from Facebook.

    But yeah, no way you'll ever get common carrier status that way.

    • They don't want common carrier status. They want to be a platform that makes a good faith effort to enforce the community standards they want on their platform.

      AWS may want to be a common carrier (not need to worry about content at all for legal protections and make that money, but Twitch has a vested interest in not being a common carrier.

  • I remember the principal at my high school always reminded us that students must adhere to code of the school conduct not only on the school premises but also outside of school or school's activities.

  • Don't use Twitch (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Frank Burly ( 4247955 ) on Thursday April 08, 2021 @01:01AM (#61249732)

    Twitch can ban people for IRL conduct and IRL people can dump Twitch for its online conduct.

    This seems like common sense for every business on earth. If you're famously an asshole, people won't want to be associated with you. People shunned by the larger forums will form their own. It isn't like you can rent out Burger King to hold your Klavern.

    • Twitch has really gone downhill. They seem to allow/encourage stuff that's pretty much soft porn on a game streaming service that's likely to be used by kids/young teens (cameras very intentionally pointed at excessive cleavage, then hot tub/bikini streamers)

      Yet just a few days ago they banned the Revision demo party stream with no warning/explanation. People were speculating that the automated banhammer may have detected a pixelated nipple in a piece of artwork...
      • ... soft porn ...

        Since soft porn by definition, doesn't show pussy or swollen penis, all nudity can be mislabeled "soft porn". It's called "porn" because the fucking is very real or, at least, indistinguishable from real fucking. Re-branding everything as porn demands everyone be horrified by the smallest bit of reality.

        ... kids/young teens ...

        We can't let those teens with nipples and hairy sexual organs actually see a nipple.

        ... pixelated nipple ...

        So real nipple bad; stylized, censored nipple good: Got it. I understand that Twitter and others don't want to be accus

    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • So whos "morals" will they be following? If one of the investigators is a religious nut case that will ban a woman that had a abortion or made porn, will they be following the law or morals of that one? Then they will have to ban people beeing arested demonstrating against a dictatorship. Or do amazon make their own law and morals? This seems like such a bad idea in many ways. And where will they draw the line? Being arested for drunk driving or the capital offence of stealing a Amazon delivery?
  • by arbiter1 ( 1204146 ) on Thursday April 08, 2021 @01:47AM (#61249824)
    If you look at any sports players contracts they have clauses like this in all of them. If you do some bad crap outside the sport they can terminate the contract its not new for them shocking is took twitch this long but really a question how far will they take it again people that broke no real law's like maybe holding an opinion that differ's from the company.
    • It makes some sense with a sports team on account of a player being a public figure, employed by the team. For Twitch there wouldn't be the expectation that they endorse the personal lives of their users. What Twitch is proposing is akin to the relationship between a creator and a publisher. They get editorial control minus the accountability that comes with being a publisher.

      • Analogies only go so far because these things aren't identical.

        Twitch is also like a TV channel. You bet they'd axe a show that brought in bad publicity regardless of whether the bad publicity was caused by on-screen or off-screen actions.

        What Twitch is proposing is akin to the relationship between a creator and a publisher. They get editorial control minus the accountability that comes with being a publisher.

        I don't see a problem with this. The internet doesn't always fit into exactly pre-internet categori

    • Not everyone on Twitch is a professional.

  • I never liked the internet and then Web in that it was "always online". This gives to much power to AOL and Compuserve or their modern day equivalents Google, Twitch and such.

    It's a good thing people such as Tim Berners-Lee have come up with alternatives, namely IPFS. Current DNS and other services are flawed in that they are single points of truth*and* failure. I'm looking forward to a time when IPFS and blockchain based Nameservices - one of the very rare things blockchain is actually useful for - are com

  • by Misagon ( 1135 ) on Thursday April 08, 2021 @05:51AM (#61250274)

    One thing that they don't seem to take into account is that people change.

    People sometimes actually do see the errors of their ways, and choose to leave e.g. a criminal gang, or a racist organisation.

    Some people who have served prison time for heinous crimes do feel sorry and come out rehabilitated.
    A sentence should not be a sentence for all time.

  • by MitchDev ( 2526834 ) on Thursday April 08, 2021 @07:05AM (#61250396)

    Twitch: "We found the golden goose! .... now let's kill it!"

He has not acquired a fortune; the fortune has acquired him. -- Bion

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