Known for her chat broadcasts on Twitch, Shirahiko claimed that Twitch discriminated against gender with a post she made on Twitter. In the post that divided the social media into two, it was noteworthy that Twitch did not give a warning against hate speech against men.
Twitch remains one of the most popular streaming platforms. There are definitely a few streamers that almost everyone, gaming or not, follows. Especially lately, besides game broadcasts, art and chat channels have also attracted great attention.
Shirahiko, who has been on Twitch broadcasts for a long time and is known for her chat broadcasts, touched on an interesting subject with a tweet she sent today. of shirahiko Twitch is making ‘gender discrimination’ The sharing he claimed brought along interesting reactions.
“Twitch doesn’t like men”
(I laughed so hard, even Twitch hates you)
Shirahiko, who wants to change her Twitch broadcast title, “I hate men” He didn’t receive any warnings from Twitch when he edited the title as “I hate women” when you change it to Stuck on Twitch moderation policy warning told. Sharing the screenshot of the warnings with her followers, Shirahiko “Even Twitch hates you” gave his words.
The post about Twitch’s gender segregation garnered a lot of backlash in a short time. While some users said that hate speech should be completely controlled, others argued that hate is also an emotion and should be freely expressed. The reason why hate speech against women is not allowed but against men is unknown. From Twitch on the subject An official statement has yet to come.
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There were interesting reactions to the sharing from social media.
(It’s so shitty that some people think it’s okay to hate men. Glorifying men and bringing attention to their problems is literally how we create more equality, eliminate toxic masculinity, and become more empathetic people.)
(Wait that doesn’t sound fair, you should be able to hate everyone equally regardless of gender etc.)
(Welcome to the current year when it’s perfectly acceptable to hate men.) (You’re going to use this…)
(To be fair, one has historically been more of a problem than the other. But I wish all hatred could be minimized)
(I think sexism and violence against women are more common.)