Xorte logo

News Markets Groups

USA | Europe | Asia | World| Stocks | Commodities



Add a new RSS channel

 
 


Keywords

2021-12-01 01:05:10| Engadget

Twitch is introducing a new machine learning feature to help streamers protect their channels from people attempting to avoid bans. Dubbed "Suspicious User Detection," the tool will automatically flag individuals it suspects may be "likely" or "possible" ban dodgers.In cases involving the former, Twitch will prevent any messages they send from showing up in chat. It will also identify those individuals for streamers and any mods helping them with their channel. At that point, they can decide if they want to ban that person. By default, possible repeat trolls can send messages in chat, but they too will be flagged by the system. Additionally, Twitch says creators have the option to prevent them from sending any messages in the first place.Twitch"The tool is powered by a machine learning model that takes a number of signals into account including, but not limited to, the user's behavior and account characteristics and compares that data against accounts previously banned from a Creator's channel to assess the likelihood the account is evading a previous channel-level ban," a Twitch spokesperson told Engadget when we asked about the signals the system uses to detect potential offenders.While Twitch plans to turn on Suspicious User Detection for everyone, the tool won't automatically ban users for streamers. That's by design because it's impossible to create a machine learning tool that is 100 percent accurate in every context. "You're the expert when it comes to your community, and you should make the final call on who can participate," the company said in a blog post. "The tool will learn from the actions you take and the accuracy of its predictions should improve over time as a result."The introduction of the tool follows a summer in which Twitch struggled to contain a phenomenon called "hate raids." The attacks saw malicious individuals use thousands of bots to spam channels with hateful language. In many cases, they targeted creators from marginalized communities. Hate raids became such a frequent feature of the platform that some creators walked away from Twitch for a day in protest of the company's lack of action.


Category: Marketing and Advertising

 

Latest from this category

10.02Iberia caps Madrid-Barcelona airfares at EUR 99 after rail disaster 
09.02Riot Games is laying off half of the 2XKO development team
09.02DOJ may face investigation for pressuring Apple, Google to remove apps for tracking ICE agents
09.02OpenAI starts testing ads in ChatGPT
09.02Here's how to disable Ring's creepy Search Party feature
09.02YouTube TV launches curated subscription packages this week
09.02Apple's Magic Mouse drops to only $68
09.02The first PlayStation State of Play of 2026 will air on February 12
Marketing and Advertising »

All news

10.02Upstox not in a hurry for IPO, targets 2.3x jump in FY26 profit to Rs 500 crore
10.02US to exempt some Bangladeshi clothes from tariffs
10.02Navin Fluorine shares up 3% as Q3 net profit soars 122% to Rs 185 crore
10.02Positive Breakout: These 11 stocks cross above their 200 DMAs
10.02Gov. JB Pritzker talked Bears with with NFL commissioner, says progress is being made to keep team in Illinois
10.02Actis enters race to re-acquire Sprng Energy from Shell at $2 billion valuation
10.02Jewellery stocks rally on back of US-India trade deal
10.02SBI logs biggest single-day gain in 19 months on strong Q3 results
More »
Privacy policy . Copyright . Contact form .