Twitch CEO apologises for pornography on Ninja's channel

Twitch CEO apologises for pornography on Ninja’s channel


Ninja looking dejected after losing at the Fortnite World Cup FinalsImage copyright
Getty Images

Image caption

Ninja left Twitch for Mixer in August 2019

Twitch has apologised to former streamer Ninja after pornography was hosted on his page.

Twitch replaced the content on the page – which has 14.7 million followers – to show a list of other streamers after he left the platform for Mixer this month.

But Ninja said he was “disgusted” after the top-listed streamer on his page featured pornographic videos.

Twitch chief executive Emmett Shear said he “wanted to apologise directly to Ninja” and had removed the account.

“The lewd content that appeared on the Ninja offline channel page grossly violates our terms of service ,” he said. “We’ve permanently suspended the account in question.

“We have also suspended [recommending other channels on Ninja’s page] while we investigate how this content came to be promoted.”

Image copyright
Twitch/Ninja

Image caption

This is what visitors to Ninja’s Twitch channel saw, before it reverted back to a normal offline channel – though we added the pixelation

The incident occurred after the Amazon-owned games streaming platform decided to list the most popular streams in the Fortnite category on Ninja’s page.

Because they were sorted by popularity, with the videos with the most viewers appearing first, a pornographic channel shot to the top of the listings as people clicked to see what was happening.

This caused pornography to be the first thing visitors to Ninja’s old channel saw, complete with his branding at the top of the page.

In a video which has been viewed more than four million times, Ninja said he was “disgusted and so sorry”.

“As you guys know I’m streaming on Mixer now,” he said. “There was a porn account which was number one being recommended on my channel. And I have no say in any of this stuff.

“We’re trying to get the whole channel taken down to begin with, or at least not promote other streamers and other channels on my brand, on my profile.

“So for anyone who saw that, for anyone whose kids saw that, I apologise, and I’m sorry.”

Image copyright
Twitter

source: bbc.com