Culture Twitch: Updating our Approach to Sexual Content and Content Classification Labels - The "topless trend" went to far.

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Author: Angela Hession

We have received consistent feedback from streamers that our current policies around sexual content are confusing and that it can be difficult to know how their content will be interpreted based on these policies. We want streamers to feel confident they understand our rules and viewers to feel confident they will get the experience they expect. To accomplish this we are making two changes, effective today:
  • Streamlining our policies regarding sexual content, and
  • Updating the criteria used for Homepage recommendations

Streamlined Sexual Content Policy

To be effective, policies need to be easy to understand so that a streamer knows what is allowed on the site and what is not allowed. Part of the confusion comes from the fact that there are currently two separate policies in the Community Guidelines that address sexual content. There is also an additional section in the Content Classification Guidelines that describes when a streamer needs to label their content as including Sexual Themes. Going forward, the Sexually Suggestive Content and Sexually Explicit Content policies will be consolidated into a single Sexual Content Policy within the Community Guidelines. This policy specifies the types of sexual content that are prohibited on Twitch and violating this policy will result in account enforcement.

When consolidating these two policies we removed portions of the Sexually Suggestive Content Policy that closely resembled language in the Content Classification Guidelines. The guidelines explaining what content needed a Sexual Themes Label were not distinct enough from the language in the Sexually Suggestive Content Policy and made them difficult to follow.

We launched Content Classification Labels (CCL) back in June in recognition that some content that is allowed on our service may not be suitable for all audiences. We believe that accurate content labeling is key to helping viewers get the experience they expect, and now that we can enable appropriate labeling of sexual content using CCLs we believe that some of the restrictions in our former policies are no longer required. In addition to providing clarity, these updates will also reduce the risk of inconsistent enforcement and bring our policy more in line with other social media services. The FAQ below provides a high-level summary of some of the changes, and you can find the full policy language, including detailed examples of prohibited content, on the Safety Center.

Content Recommendations for the Homepage

We also recognize that not all members of the community want to see certain content, even if it is properly labeled with a Content Classification Label. When a CCL is applied, viewers must provide explicit consent before they can start watching the stream. However, if labeled streams are shown on the Twitch homepage, viewers may still see content in stream thumbnails that makes them uncomfortable.

We want to make sure the homepage, which is often the first page that viewers land on, is more aligned with viewer expectations. To address this, we’re updating the criteria used for homepage recommendations. Streams that are labeled as including Drugs, Intoxication, or Excessive Tobacco Use; Violent and Graphic Depictions; Gambling; and/or Sexual Themes will no longer be included in homepage recommendations shelves due to the visual nature of those topics. Streams labeled as including Mature-rated Games and Profanity will not be affected by this update unless the streamer has also selected one of the labels bolded above. Viewers can still search for, or go directly to channels they follow that are streaming labeled content via the left bar of the home page, but streams using these labels will not be surfaced in homepage recommendations shelves. Streams with these labels will still be included in Category page recommendations so viewers can navigate to the appropriate category for this content.

Making this change helps ensure that viewers will not see content they haven’t consented to seeing. We will continue to explore adding more personalized viewer settings in the future.

Share Your Feedback

We want you to feel confident that you know what is expected of you, and we believe these changes will help you make informed decisions about your content.

We appreciate your feedback on this topic, and we’re always keeping an eye out for additional feedback via UserVoice.

FAQ

Q: What is changing with this new update?

A: Some types of content that were prohibited will now be allowed on Twitch, if appropriately labeled. These changes include:

  • Previously prohibited but now Allowed With Label
    • Content that ‘deliberately highlighted breasts, buttocks or pelvic region,’ even when fully clothed. Streamers found it difficult to determine what was prohibited and what was allowed and often evaluating whether or not a stream violated this portion of the policy was subjective. In addition, the former Sexually Suggestive Content policy was out of line with industry standards and resulted in female-presenting streamers being disproportionately penalized.
    • Fictionalized (drawn, animated, or sculpted) fully exposed female-presenting breasts and/or genitals or buttocks regardless of gender. There is a thriving artist community on Twitch, and this policy was overly punitive and did not reflect the impact of the content.
    • Body writing on female-presenting breasts and/or buttocks regardless of gender. The Twitch Attire Policy already allows body art on breasts and buttocks, so this change makes these policies consistent.
    • Erotic dances that involve disrobing or disrobing gestures, such as strip teases.
  • Changes to Popular Dances
    • Popular dances, such as twerking, grinding, and pole dancing are now allowed without a label. Previously some dances were prohibited and others were allowed with a label. Enforcing on dances regardless of context meant our policy prohibited twerking at a wedding or taking a pole dancing exercise class, for example. The policy now takes context into consideration, and only prohibits streaming inside of an adult entertainment establishment.
Q: With the updates to the Sexual Content Policy, are artistic depictions of nudity allowed?

A: Content with a focus on fictionalized (drawn, animated, or sculpted) sexual body parts regardless of gender (such as doing nude figure drawing) are allowed with a Sexual Themes Label. However, fictionalized sexual acts or masturbation remain prohibited.

Q: Is body painting on the breasts and buttocks allowed on Twitch?

A: As long as attire requirements are met, body painting on the breasts and buttocks is allowed with a Sexual Themes Label.

Q: How does Twitch handle nudity in gaming?

A: We handle nudity in games in two ways. First, games featuring nudity, pornography, sex, or sexual violence as a core focus or feature are entirely prohibited. Custom gameplay or visual modifications that include nudity or sex content, including uncensored patches, in otherwise allowed games are prohibited. Learn more about prohibited games.

Second, for games where nudity is not the core focus or feature, the Mature-rated Games Content Classification Label is sufficient for incidental nudity. However, the Sexual Themes Label must be applied to gameplay that focuses on nudity. Learn more about the Mature-rated Games Content Classification Label.

Users may not engage in simulated sexual activity or erotic roleplay with other players in online games. Games that primarily consist of user-generated content, in-game roleplay, or interactions in virtual reality are not exempt from this policy.

Q: If the Mature-rated game that I am playing includes violence, alcohol, gambling, or sexual themes, does that mean I also need to apply the relevant Content Classification Labels, in addition to the Mature-rated Game Label?

A: The Mature-rated Game Label covers most content that occurs within the game itself, if the content is encountered as part of regular gameplay. However, if a streamer chooses to focus their stream on in-game content that features sexual themes, such as fictional nudity, or overlays their gameplay with comments or topics that qualify for any Content Classification Label, they should apply all relevant labels. In-game content that features simulated sexual activities between players is still prohibited.

Q: Will streams labeled with CCLs no longer be recommended in the left bar of the homepage under “Recommended Channels”?

A: This update will not prevent streams from being recommended in the left bar of the homepage, as stream thumbnails are not shown in that section.

Q: Will labeling one of my streams with a CCL also impact the visibility of future streams?

A: No, past streams do not impact the visibility of future streams. When your stream does not include one of the CCLs listed above, it will again be eligible to be shown on homepage recommendations shelves.

Q: What happens if I do not use a Content Classification Label?

A: Our Sexual Themes Content Classification Guidelines describe what content needs to be labeled using the Sexual Themes Label. Failure to use a Content Classification Label accurately will result in warnings and the correct CCL will be applied by Twitch to the stream. If you fail to apply the correct CCL repeatedly, the CCL will be temporarily locked onto the stream, but it will not result in a suspension.
 
I low key think the main reason sjws and feminists rage incredibly hard about sexualized manga/anime/porn is because in 2023 sex/nudity is almost entirely monetized content.

They can't make money off of someone whacking it to hentai and the guy whacking it to futa hentai isn't subscribing to OnlyFans or tipping on twitch so it has to be banned

They literally do not want anyone to become aroused unless they pay for micro transactions.
You cannot play a game with a scene of nudity or cuss, but a woman can literally expose her body and "pretend" to play games, no questions asked. Oh, you can LABEL your content as such. How perverted are people nowadays?
 
(The dude got banned for 2 months for this if I remember correctly)
Which rules did this break? Also who is that? It was really funny.
Don't kink shame. Some people like it.
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It's a fair criticism. If you're covering this and part of your angle is that it's inappropriate for children, your video should be set to age-restricted and you shouldn't have the topless image as your thumbnail. Quartering won't do that, though, because it would limit his monetization.
 
nothing like having a reputation for being a groomer-infested shithole and then going on to enshrine rules that effectively endorse the sexualization of minors on your pedo-ridden website. i could never have expected we'd end up here as a culture, but lo and behold. this cesspool of idiotic degeneracy has gone further than any before it and people are just going to carry on like nothing's wrong. after all, nothing happened with the sneaky OnlyFans fiasco a few months ago.
 
Chris at least paid for sex. What exactly are these pathetic simps paying for?
As disgusting as fucking prositutes is, is still more noble than subbing to an onlyfans or "donating" to a twitch thot.
Why do people watch her and pay her on Twitch, when they can watch her for free on Pornhub? And if someone's gonna pay a whore, at least pay a whore who will actually fuck you IRL. I don't get this generation.
In case you havent figured it out by now, the onlyfans/thot dynamic is a parasocial girlfriend on demand service. Its not about the actual tits and ass being showing off. Its the idea you can have a woman smile at the camera and show you her tits as if shes genuinely into you(or whatever cute/intimate thing thats pleasing to see women do).

Modern man, being weak and like water takes the path of least resistance and just pays for those tidbits of human companionship instead of investing time into a woman and getting it naturally. Of course its all for nothing in the end. But the 75 iq smoothbrained coomers cant possibly comprehend why paying for affection/love is self defeating.
 
Linktrees to onlyfans/twitter, women with oiled up boobs just sitting there doing ASMR and getting paid money. Advertising themselves as your gamer e-gf. It's either that or watch the pinnacle of male superiority: Asmongold, Hasan, and xqc.
Or you could just play the video games yourself. I'm frankly shocked at how much time some of these people spend jannying for some dude or simping for e-girls. It's like: "you know you're gonna die someday, right?"

Or go outside and touch grass, but we all know that's never gonna happen.
 
I feel as if it's already there. Linktrees to onlyfans/twitter, women with oiled up boobs just sitting there doing ASMR and getting paid money. Advertising themselves as your gamer e-gf. It's either that or watch the pinnacle of male superiority: Asmongold, Hasan, and xqc.

People like to say this is a Twitch problem. But there are female youtubers making onlyfans/fansly accounts. TikTokers and Instagram as well. And if you knew what was happening on Snapchat, Discord and random webchat sites, you'd want to nuke the earth from the moon. You are all kept fairly insulated from it. Thanks to filters on search engines.
 
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I may be on the Farms too much. I swear that the woman all this controversy started with looks like a troon.
sickest traps ever seen on a biological femoid, would pay to lift my furniture on a move with my dick

I was hoping to post this article while the site is TOR only but am not disappointed with our news team in these dark hours :semperfidelis:
 
I have a better solution. Just make an adult section to Twitch. Charge it money and anyone who is doing something subtly pornographic or outright pornographic is sent there. Simps will throw money at this.

There. Twitch fixed.
The thing is, like with Discord, those tech giants don't want to fix anything. They'll do the song and dance about muh kids, but either due to ideological or financial reason they'll keep their sites being legitimately dangerous for children, and god forbid any government actually forces them to comply.
 
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