Originally published by Tubefilter


Twitch has a new solution for the pervasive presence of viewbots on its platform. CEODan Clancyrevealed that streamers who are charged with artificially inflating their view counts will be punished by having a cap placed on their concurrent viewership.

Clancy discussed the policy update in a post on X. He wrote that “viewbotting is bad for our business” while also admitting that “effectively combatting viewbotting is challenging.” Viewbotting companies can quickly respond to enforcement attempts by updating their own tactics, and Twitch doesn’t want its countermeasures to be so overzealous that they impact legitimate viewership.

So in addition to policies that target viewbot providers — such as themass removalof accounts that are believed to be bots — Twitch is taking aim at the accounts that benefit from that forbidden practice. The hope, according to Clancy, is that the widened scope of the viewbot crackdown will bring “meaningful progress.”

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“For channels identified as persistently viewbotting, we will apply a cap to the streamer’s [concurrent viewership] for a fixed period of time, on all of the Twitch surfaces,”Clancy wrote. “The cap will be based upon historical data regarding that creator’s non-viewbotted traffic. Repeated violations will result in longer penalties. Streamers will be notified when an enforcement is applied, along with the duration of the penalty, and can appeal through the appeals portal.”

Last year, Clancy promised a stronger response to viewbotting.He claimedthat “thousands of small streamers” use inflated view counts to generate “bogus revenue.”A whitepaper published byStreams Chartsfound that Q2 2025 was the first quarter when at least 10% of Twitch accounts with at least 50 average quarterly viewers “displayed clear signs of persistent viewbotting.”

According to that paper, the viewbotting problem is even bigger onKick, but that doesn’t mean that the upstart streaming hub supports its competitor’s crackdown. Ina post on X, Kick Co-FounderBijan Tehraniclaimed that “Twitch already caps view counts.” Tehrani also suggested that big streamers will be able to find the excuses they need to evade punishment.

Perhaps Tehrani’s cynicism is warranted, but Twitch’s crackdown bodes well for its bottom line. For example, advertisers who are worried about inflated view counts might adjust their budgets in response. The proposed solution might affect sometraffic numbers for streamers, but Clancy is arguing that the ends justify the means.

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