Twitch’s massive data leak could change live streaming as we know it
Here are 5 reasons why
Potential impacts
1)Trust in Twitchwill surely be dented, although likely not completely destroyed, by this leak. Whilesome streamersmight not publicly express much dismay or frustration, and justchange their passwordsand move on, many willcertainlybe more vocal.
Many users will now be alarmed by account security risks. Twitch markets itself on the basis of trust and relative openness, selling the idea that streamers and viewers arenot interacting with a company, but rather with friends. With a massive data leak, this message is now seriously challenged.
- The leak will likely intensify the draw of other streaming platforms. One short-lived competitor to Twitch, Mixer,closed down last year. Mixer had secured a number ofsuperstar streamersbut failed to create the sort of community found on Twitch.
But if Twitch no longer seems secure, or if other platforms can offer more attractive terms, how many streamers might decide to make a move to the alternatives, such as YouTube Gaming?
- The economy of Twitch is based on viewersgiving money to streamers. These are mostly donations (one-off payments) or subscriptions (monthly payments). As such, most streamers make much of their money via many small payments fromdedicated fans.
Although everyone knew top streamers had substantial incomes, the true scale of this is perhaps only now becoming clear to many viewers. The top dozens of streamers can bring in millions of dollars a year, while at least hundreds of others collect six-figure paychecks.
Twitch fans therefore might reduce their support of those who are already comfortably millionaires. On a large enough scale, the combined economic impacts could be significant. Twitch takes around half of the subscription payments, and a smaller portion of donations, so reduced income for streamers means reduced income for the platform as well.
- The leak suggests Twitch is, or was, developing a competitor to the dominant gaming platformSteam, owned byValve Corporation. Steam is currently the hub for most PC gaming, but has been criticised formonopolistic practicesand challenged by competitors such as theEpic Games Storeanditch.io.
New information in the leak might give Valve a significant advantage in countering Twitch’s offering before it even launches. In turn, might Twitch abandon the project altogether, or do the opposite and accelerate its release since there’s now no time to lose? Either way, this will impact games distribution and consumption in years to come.
- Lastly, this leak has probably been a serious wake-up call for all major digital platforms.Twitch is owned by Amazon, one of the largest and most influential internet companies on the planet. Yet, it was seemingly taken completely by surprise with this leak.
What went wrong in Amazon or Twitch’s multi-billion dollar systems to allow such an incident? There will likely be a serious reckoning for the company here, and one that comes on the heels of other recent controversies aroundFacebook,Twitter,OnlyFansand other internet giants, whose growth and profitability are driven by user-created content.
Is all lost?
Despite all of the above, this is far from a knock-out blow for Twitch. The platform dominates the live streaming space in most countries and has already seen off competitors.
Twitch is also rife withsystemsdesigned to boost user retention and discourage both streamers and viewers from moving to other websites. So much of (game) live streaming culture and practice is the same as Twitch culture and practice, and this gives the platform a strong incumbent advantage.
Still, precisely because Twitch has become such a central part of gaming culture, it can’t take such an attack lightly. It remains to be seen what the leak will mean for gaming, gamers, live streaming, and digital platforms as a whole in the coming months and years.
What is certain is that as Twitch’s allure takes hit after hit — withsexism,so-called “hate raids”and now a huge data leak — the platform may well have to fight for a future of live streaming dominance that, at one point, appeared quietly assured.
Article byMark R Johnson, Lecturer in Digital Cultures,University of Sydney
This article is republished fromThe Conversationunder a Creative Commons license. Read theoriginal article.
Story byThe Conversation
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