Over the last few days, Twitch streamers from marginalized groups have taken to Twitter to appeal to the Amazon-owned company to start doing something meaningful about the serious issues of harassment on the platform. In response, Twitch put up a Twitter threadsaying it will engage in âopen and ongoing dialogue.â All together: Siiiiiggghhhh.
When your user base is screaming in frustration at you, bellowing their years-long, years-ignored complaints about the abysmal nature of your systems for protecting streamers, suggesting the idea of âongoing dialogueâ is ironically an awful lot like saying youâve not been listening. At this point what Twitch streamers want is not simply more conversation but rather solid, meaningful changes, changes like having new accounts require a phone number or the option for automatic blocks against those using hate speech.
Itâs so galling when such human complaints are met by such inhuman management guff like, âYouâre asking us to do better, and we know we need to do more to address these issues.â Empty words, meaningless fluff that pretends to be acknowledging something while offering zip.
Weâve seen a lot of conversation about botting, hate raids, and other forms of harassment targeting marginalized creators. Youâre asking us to do better, and we know we need to do more to address these issues. That includes an open and ongoing dialogue about creator safety.
â Twitch (@Twitch) August 11, 2021
Kotaku reached out to Twitch for comment but did not receive an immediate reply.
The Twitter thread goes on to not-quite-identify a âvulnerability in our proactive filtersâ that Twitch has ârolled out an update to close this gapâ which means it will now âbetter detect hate speech in chat.â I mean, maybe this is a really good thing? But good gravy, thereâs no way to know from this impenetrable garble. Maybe it will block that hate speech? Or add clap emojis when it identifies it? Weâll likely never know.
Twitch then goes on to offer more vague allusions to not quite the things people have been asking for. While, as Kotaku reported, streamers wanted seemingly simple solutionsâlike requiring phone numbers when creating accounts or not allowing new accounts to use chatâTwitch promised, âchannel-level ban evasion detection and account verification improvements,â which would come âas soon as possible.â Then, in its most tone-deaf move, the company follows up these ambiguous promises with a link to its âexisting tools,â i.e. the ones that everyone is imploring them to realize are nowhere near fit for purpose.
But, youâll be relieved to learn, its âwork is never done,â and our input is âessential as we try to build a safer Twitch.â Before, incredibly, once again saying that it will be âreaching out to community members to learn more about their experiences.â Twitch! Thatâs whatâs already happening. You could maybe instead⊠start listening?
We're launching channel-level ban evasion detection and account verification improvements later this year. Weâre working hard to launch these tools as soon as possible, and we hope they will have a big impact. Check out more on our existing tools here: https://t.co/Dku6eBhY72
â Twitch (@Twitch) August 11, 2021
Yes, of course itâs good that Twitch is responding at all. But itâs so frustrating that corporations still cannot understand the inappropriateness of corporate responses to real peopleâs exasperation and desperation. At this point, what people want to read is a normal, human reply. One that says, âYes, youâre right, weâve been a bit shit at getting this sorted. But weâre on it now. Weâve read what youâre all saying, and so much of it is right. Of course we should be making it more difficult to create accountsâweâre working on that now, and will get it implemented as soon as we can. And of course it should be easier and more effective to opt in to blocking those using hate speech. We will keep you up-to-date as we fix all of this.â
See, itâs not hard. Contrition is not the same as opening a company up to litigation! Twitch hasnât done anything wrong. Itâs just not done an awful lot of stuff right. Itâs offered something thatâs crap and now have the opportunity to make it less crap, and the first step in doing that is not to put out woolly, confusing statements, and ultimately empty and meaningless platitudes.