Middle-east Arab News Opinion | Asharq Al-awsat

A Chat with a Live Streamer is Yours, for a Price | ASHARQ AL-AWSAT English Archive 2005 -2017
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Live video continues to grow in popularity on social media platforms like Facebook, YouTube, Twitch and Twitter. (AFP)


New York – Andre Rebelo, a 24-year-old YouTube streamer from Vancouver, British Columbia, live-streamed himself playing the game Grand Theft Auto V on his YouTube channel, Typical Gamer, in mid-January. This time, he added something different for his audience.

As Mr. Rebelo broadcast his gameplay, he used a new YouTube feature called Super Chat to invite his more than 4.5 million subscribers to send him comments. For those viewers willing to pay him a sum of their choice — from $1 to $500 — Mr. Rebelo would more prominently feature their comments.

One viewer quickly wrote, “Hey you, your videos are so cool I love you,” and offered Mr. Rebelo $10 through Super Chat. Another wrote, “What’s up TG, watching live from the NYC,” and gave $5. Someone even donated the largest amount possible, $500.

By the end of the 90-minute live stream, Mr. Rebelo had received 250 Super Chat messages and netted $4,000 from them.

Super Chat is one of the newest ways that streamers can make money. To date, the primary way creators earn money on YouTube has been through subscriptions and advertising. Eligible streamers can enable ad options on their channels, leading to several types of ads appearing next to their videos; creators then earn a share of the revenue.

But as live video continues to grow in popularity on social media platforms like Facebook and Twitter, dedicated video streaming platforms like YouTube and Twitch, the Amazon-owned live-streaming platform that focuses on video games, are looking for new ways to sweeten the deal for streamers to encourage them to produce more live video content.

YouTube began a test of Super Chat on January 12 and followed with a wide rollout of the feature on February 7. Now any YouTube streamer with more than 1,000 subscribers who is registered with YouTube’s Partner Program — which allows users to earn money from videos through advertising — can enable Super Chat during a live stream.

Once Super Chat is turned on, viewers can pay $1 to $500 to have their comment highlighted. The more they pay, the more characters a comment can contain, and the longer it will remain “pinned” to the live-stream window, making it more visible. So while a $5 Super Chat message can contain a maximum of 150 characters and stays highlighted for two minutes, a $500 Super Chat message can have 350 characters and is highlighted for five hours.

“For creators, Super Chat does double duty: keeping their conversations and connections with (super) fans meaningful and lively while also giving them a new way to make money,” said Barbara Macdonald, a product manager at YouTube who worked on Super Chat.

Twitch has a feature similar to Super Chat called Cheering, begun in June 2016, which lets viewers “tip” streamers during a live stream. Viewers “cheer” by using “Bits,” virtual goods that come in the form of animated gem-shaped emoticons. Viewers can buy Bits directly from the chat window; there are different colors and sizes starting at $1.40 for 100 Bits. Streamers receive one cent for every Bit used in their chat.

“Twitch viewers are very savvy and in tune with their favorite casters, so they are aware that their support is what enables their favorite streamers to broadcast full time,” said Matt McCloskey, the vice president for commerce at Twitch.

Super Chat and Cheering are more than about money — they also offer another way for streamers and their audiences to bond and converse. T. L. Taylor, a professor of comparative media studies at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, said real-time interaction with audiences in live streaming — particularly in the genre of video game live streaming — was increasingly becoming a crucial part of the experience.

“Game live-streaming taps into the longstanding pleasure of spectating other people’s play,” Dr. Taylor said. “Live streamers are adept at connecting with the folks watching them, drawing them out and into the play experience.”

YouTube and Twitch have experimented with other ways to profit from content in the past, including subscription services and merchandising. YouTube introduced its subscription service, YouTube Red, in late 2015, in which members pay a recurring fee to watch their favorite channels without ads.

On Twitch, while all channels are free, subscribing to a channel gives viewers perks like subscriber-only chat, subscriber-only emoticons and discounts on merchandise. Subscriptions on Twitch are generally around $4.99 a month.

But features like Super Chat and Cheering feel more personal.

“Some people just like to let me know that my videos make their day, what video is their favorite, suggestions for future live streams and over all just to increase the odds of their comments being seen and for me to say their name,” Mr. Rebelo said.

The New York Times