If youâre a popular League of Legends eSports player, who actually owns the streams of your matches? Thatâs a complicated question, but in the case of ultra-popular pro Sanghyuk âFakerâ Lee, the answer seems clear cut. Another streamer, however, found a loophole thatâs thrown it all into question. And controversy.
Twitch streamer StarLordLucian runs a channel that automatically streams all of Fakerâs solo-queue matches. Competitive LoL matches run on Twitch all the time, but Fakerâs shouldnât be. The SK Telecom T1 player has a deal with streaming platform Azubu that grants them exclusive rights to his matches.
So naturally, Azubu lobbed a DMCA takedown notice at Lucianâs stream and figured that was that. But it wasnât.
Thing is, StarLordLucian isnât swiping footage from Azubuâs streams. Instead, heâs watching Fakerâs matches in League of Legendsâ as a spectator using a third-party clientâthat Riot supportsâcalled OP.GG and passing that along to his stream.
Now, hereâs the bit thatâs probably of interest to you even if youâre not a LoL pro with major companies playing tug-of-war for your table scraps: LoL creator Riotânot a third-party company, not youâowns all of your shit. Their game, their in-game assets, their rules. As PCGamesN points out in their post on the matter, Riotâs terms of service read:
âYou acknowledge and agree that you shall have no ownership or other property interest in your account, and you further acknowledge and agree that, other than your limited access to use the account, all rights in and to the account are and shall forever be owned by and inure to the benefit of Riot Games. You acknowledge and agree that you have no claim, right, title, ownership or other proprietary interest in the game assets.â
Lucian is running his stream with that information in mind. He explained: âRight now nothing my stream does is illegal or against the League of Legends terms of service. Riot can always change their terms. And Riot can DMCA my stream at anytime, as they have the power to put any League related IP or Project to an end.â
OK then, what does Riot think about all of this? Well, the stream is still up, but Riot president Marc Merrill isnât pleased. Not one bit. He posted a response to Lucianâs actions on Reddit:
âYou are rationalizing and trying to justify the fact that you have singled out a player against their will and broadcasting their games in a way that he can do nothing about. That reeks of harassment and bullying â Azubu vs Twitch is irrelevant in my view.â
âIf you canât see how this potentially harms Faker and/or anyone else in this situation, then that is more reinforcement that we need to take the appropriate action to protect players from this type of unique situation.â
âAs to the comments about our API, of course we want 3rd party devs to do cool things with spectator. But when people utilize one of its components to harm / harass an individual, then we need to potentially re-evaluate our rules.â
Itâs a bit of a curious response given that a) Iâm not sure how an auto-stream of solo matches constitutes bullying and b) Azubu and Twitch are obviously interested parties when it comes to big streamer business; they are very relevant here. Still, this situation might lead Riot to make confetti out of their current rule book and come up with something that guards against similar situations in the future. Services like OP.GG might have to change too. As for how, well, thatâs up in the air right now.
Lucian, however, argues that Faker himself has yet to express that heâs in any way upset with the stream. Until Faker/SK Telecom take aim directly at the stream or Riot issues a DMCA notice of their own, Lucian said, the show will go on. ââHarassment and bullyingâ? Yeah no. I am a big Faker fan. If Faker himself personally ever requested my stream to be shut down, I would oblige instantly.â
UPDATE: Fakerâs team, SK Telecom, has issued a statement requesting that Lucianâs stream be taken down. Lucian, however, plans to keep it going despite this. He explained his sudden about-face in one âlastâ post on the matter:
âI know some people will disagree with this and bring up ethics, but I think this whole issue is about a lot more than Faker. Itâs about Riot not enforcing their own legal terms of service. Itâs about a co-owner of Riot Games being completely out of touch with esports and the spectator mode. Itâs about a company (Azubu) issuing a false DMCA claim for content they didnât even own. These are issues that will affect the future of the game and the spectator mode. All of this needs to be debated for the future of League of Legends and esports.â
As of now, the stream is still up. As Lucian pointed out, Riot can have it taken down at any timeâand they might just do so soon. So far, though, theyâve yet to change their current rules, let alone enforce the old ones. Iâve sent a mail to Riot to find out what their next step is in this situation. Iâll update this post as soon as I hear back.
To contact the author of this post, write to [email protected] or find him on Twitter @vahn16