Twitch, the popular streaming platform, has reversed its recent policy change, allowing more adult content deemed ‘artistic’. This decision came after the platform was overwhelmed with AI-generated nude content following the policy announcement on Wednesday. By Friday, Twitch CEO Dan Clancy announced the reversal, acknowledging that the policy adjustment went too far and had led to significant community concerns.
Clancy stated that real and fictional nudity would no longer be permissible on Twitch, regardless of the medium. This backtrack follows last week’s update from Twitch, an Amazon-owned company that initially relaxed its sexual content policy. The updated guidelines had allowed content that deliberately highlighted breasts, buttocks, or the pelvic region, including fictionalized nudity and erotic dances involving disrobing.
The original policy change had introduced content creation labels for specific streams, requiring viewer consent. However, the influx of AI-generated nudes, particularly challenging to differentiate from digital art and photography, prompted a reevaluation of the policy. Clancy admitted that the complexity of digital nudity, especially with the advent of AI in creating realistic images, was underestimated.
This policy reversal followed widespread concern expressed online, especially from the Twitch art community, about the overwhelming amount of AI-generated nude content that flooded the platform’s art category after the policy change.