The Real Reason Google Didn’t Buy Twitch

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After Amazon snaps up video site Twitch despite rumours of a Google purchase, we look at why the search engine giant didn’t buy them first.

Twitch is an undoubtedly dominant force in the world of gaming – with its livestreams (frequently watched and broadcasted by gaming fans, professionals gamers and game developers alike) being incredibly popular. Amazon, meanwhile, is an undisputed colossus in the world of online shopping with the retailer delivering groceries, TVs and just about everything else right to your door (sometimes by drone, too). So match the two together and what do you get? You get a massive deal that’s as much polarising as it is hopeful for those of us who’ve enjoyed the two – albeit individually – in the past. But what does Amazon’s purchase of Twitch mean now that almost $1 billion in cash money has been transferred? And what does it mean for Google who were also in the running as a potential buyer for Twitch’s offerings? In short: a lot, so read on to find out more.

Critically, Twitch and Amazon both agree that this won’t change anything about Twitch. I don’t need to tell you why this is good (for the most part everyone likes the way Twitch runs things) but I can tell you why that may not be a full truth. Emmett Shear, the CEO of Twitch explains that the buyout will “help Twitch do what we’re doing today, only faster. Twitch and Amazon have a very similar view of the world. From our point of view, very little changes” but he fails to realise that the biggest of changes has already been made.

Widely believed to be a defining factor in the buyout (and a necessary caveat if Twitch were going to be bought) is Twitch’s recent policy change. Twitch’s servers – while coping somewhat – were stretched, angel investors weren’t offering enough money and so Twitch really did need to be bought to continue to be sustainable, but that’s difficult when the axe of half a dozen lawsuits swings perilously over your neck. You see, Twitch users have a fondness for playing music in the background of their streams (if you’ve never watched – many of these things are like bonafide TV shows in their own right) and as a result, the record labels have been a bit huffy with unauthorised usage of their music, something they’ve only gotten angrier about given the amount of money that many Twitch streams make.

Already clamping down on YouTube videos with similar copyright violations, record labels could potentially sue Twitch for letting their users go about willy nilly using copyrighted music as they so wished. As a result, Twitch teamed up with a company called Audible Magic, using their detection software to check archived videos for music in their database (which is pretty extensive, from what I understand) and muting the offending footage for 30 minutes after the copyright offense was heard. Videos broadcast live won’t be affected but for those of us navigating timezones, jobs, lives, childcare and everything else that stops us from watching a Twitch show as it’s happening, mutes could spoil our fun when we’re watching archived footage. Even more so as part of Twitch’s other new, not-so-delightful policy is removing the ‘save forever’ archiving of videos and replacing it with ‘save for two weeks…after which point your video will be deleted’.

Shear explains that the audio recognition was something Amazon didn’t require and they were surprised by it (although as it will benefit them, it’s unlikely that they’ll complain too much) and that as a result of the deal they’ll be “improving quality of service,” but that likely won’t stop disgruntled gamers from causing up a stink.

It’s ire that Google won’t have to put up with, anyway, as although being the top running favourite (ok, the only favourite given that Amazon really did come out of nowhere) to buy Twitch for a similar price, they dropped out. But why did they pass on a lucrative deal that would have bolstered YouTube’s capabilities and been an incredibly valuable investment in the long run? As with many things it came down to one factor: the law.

While Google reps understandably declined to comment, the break-up of the deal between Google and Twitch is likely due to their existing ownership of YouTube. Both YouTube and Twitch are sites that allow video streaming and live broadcasts, gamers visit both sites, make both sites a lot of money and although they have slightly different niches YouTube and Twitch are arguably competitors within the same space. It’s for that reason that Google had concerns with the potential antitrust issues that could bubble up and bite them in the ass.

Even if they paid the money, dotted the is and crosses their ts, Google still could have landed in hot water from the Federal Trade Commission for trying to buyout a competitor (and thus become the biggest shark in the market). Hardly a savoury outcome for the search engine giant, Google looked to set up a “breakup fee in case the deal did not go through”. A breakup fee is by definition “a common fee used in takeover agreements if the seller backs out of a deal to sell to the purchaser” and a priority for anybody about to throw one billion big ones at a company only for the company to chicken out.

It is a shame that Twitch and Google couldn’t come to an agreement as the company would have been right at home under Google’s wing, right next to its YouTube brethren. Amazon, in comparison, have far less experience in streaming or gaming for that matter as their video streaming service (which lets you watch films and TV shows) is only just taking off. They’ve made small forays into gaming with the Amazon Fire TV box being an example, but again, nothing like the manner in which Google have.

That said though, a deal of this magnitude takes a while to officially finalise and will likely not be completed until the end of the year. So, if you’re worried about changes to Twitch, you’ve got several months to speak your voice and be heard. Just don’t play copyrighted music in the background as you do so.

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Twitch Introduces New VOD Features & Copyrighted Music Blocking System

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The popular live video streaming site for gamers has announced dramatic new features that could have major consequences throughout its community.

UPDATE: Twitch has recently responded to the issues highlighted in this story, making what was known at the time of this writing old by the time of its posting. The changes reflected since then have been updated below this original account of events.

Some big, possibly community-effecting changes are being planned for Twitch. The popular live video streaming site, which caters to video game playthroughs and major gaming tournaments has revealed on Wednesday new guidelines about their Video-On-Demand system, and a controversial copyrighted music tagging software that mutes any rights-violating videos.

Let’s address Twitch’s new VOD system first, which will have some new welcomed features for broadcasters and viewers: such as higher quality videos, the ability to watch archived content on smart phones and other platforms, a new and easier way of exporting videos to YouTube, plus more options that promise to make video discoverability all the better.

In exchange for these new features though, Twitch will be removing the option for users to save their livestreams as archived videos forever. Beginning three weeks from now, Twitch will delete all broadcasts for nonpaying Twitch members after 14 days; turbo members, meanwhile, can have past broadcasts saved in their library for up to 60 days.

Only highlights, which can stretch for up to 2 hours in length, can be saved from being deleted past their Twitch-mandated expiration date. The culling, so to speak, will begin in three-weeks time, so it’s important to hurry and trim down any broadcast to fit the 2-hour highlight specification, preventing it from getting erased. Like, right now would be best.

A good part of Twitch’s upheaval of their archival system is based on new research complied by the company, which found that 80 percent of its storage capacity is composed of past broadcasts that never get watched. Even more justifying, archived videos that do get watched, users only do so within the first 14 days of a video’s posting 84 percent of the time.

With the high cost of storage, keeping so much unwatched content was a financial burden with no real benefit to Twitch. And keeping the archival status quo harshly limited the audience a playthrough could reach due to their extraneous length. Up till now, Twitch app users on Xbox 360, iPad, and smart phones could only view live broadcasts on Twitch.

That changes now that most saved streams will be limited to highlights, opening up the full buffet of video content on their site, be it through an Internet browser, a video game console, or on a mobile device/tablet to everyone with online access. So ultimately, a good thing for views and perhaps a small headache for broadcasters who are now given few options in regards to archival methods.

Now a real potential big headache? That would be Twitch’s new audio tagging system, which scans and targets licensed audio in a video that infringes upon any copyright claim (thankfully, live broadcasts are exempt from this software). In place, the tagging system will now mute any copyrighted material in a video for 30-minutes.

YouTube has a similar copyright catching method in place for its videos, and for the content creators   there, it has been a great thorn in their collective sides, giving full unchecked power to license holders for even the slightest of violations.

Twitch is still fleshing out these new policies issued on Wednesday, and have said to be openingly hearing feedback through its social channels. And judging from the immediate, heated reaction from Twitch users, some of whom include popular Let Play-ers with massive followings, since these new policies have been revealed, the company is getting it thoroughly.

UPDATE: Twitch has apparently come out and course-corrected some of its latest decisions in the past few hours.

Through their official Twitter account and official blog, the company is reportedly eliminating the 2-hour limit on highlight videos (giving back some archival functionality to its broadcasters), and the addition of a VOD audio removal appeal button that is meant to ease the concerns over the misuse of the newly in-placed copyright music tagging system.

We will keep you up to date on any further announcements from Twitch as they become known

Source: Twitch.com

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Google Buy Twitch For $1B – How Will That Change YouTube?

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Having to compete with livestreamers and popular gaming channels, Google have purchased Twitch for $1 billion to increase their video influence.

Gaming isn’t just about the playing any more – it’s about the thrill of a quick succession of button presses that gets you the winning kill in Call of Duty, or the trickshot that scores a magnificent goal in FIFA or the play that outsmarts your opponent to get to checkmate in an online game of chess if that’s really your thing. Hey, no judgement from me. In short, these days gaming is very much about the spectacle which is why folks like PewDiePie rake in $4 million a year from humble beginnings as a YouTuber who just liked to make videos about the games he was playing. And we know a lot about how these YouTubers are making money and how journalism is very much migrating to the service but outside of YouTube, millions are also being made using Twitch, with many gamers preferring to watch the hottest slices of gaming action live rather than videos that are pre-recorded, edited and displayed hours later for a delayed audience to see. YouTube was having to compete in a big way against popular streamers displaying eSports matches (such as games in League of Legends) so if you can’t beat ‘em, join ‘em which is exactly why YouTube’s parent company, Google, has just bought Twitch for $1 billion.

That figure might seem like a high price but in actual fact, Google has got itself a bargain deal here as the burgeoning rise of eSports means that more and more people are watching streamed eSports shows and streamed eSports games every single day, with Twitch being included on PS4 and Xbox One which only helps to further drive up the numbers of its 50 million monthly active users. And it’s also a great investment from the company as having Twitch in their back pocket now allows them to encourage more gamers to use their site as well as Twitch’s efforts will now be supported by Google and YouTube’s multi-billion dollar backend rather than a well put together team that was searching for investors as their growing popularity led to growing costs.

For existing YouTube users though, don’t expect revolutionary change but rather a much more subtle one. The video site already caters to music lovers in a big way with shows such as the YouTube Music Awards and streamed concerts showing that, so we can just expect eSports tournaments and gaming events to be promoted in a big way too which is fine if you’re into that and the banners that usually promote these events are only a clicked ‘x’ away from making them disappear anyway. Furthermore, YouTube is especially good at recommending things for us based on our individual tastes so if your video history suggests that you hate gaming like it’s the worst thing to happen to you since Arrested Development got cancelled, then, I wouldn’t expect YouTube to shove gaming streams in your face either.

Source: Variety

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YouTube to Buy Twitch for $1 Billion

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In the face of Twitch’s continued success, YouTube are reportedly set to buy the livestreaming service for $1 billion.

No matter how much you, I, or YouTube deny it, the video landscape is changing. For gamers in particular, there are several avenues down which we can travel down in order to see glorious gaming footage play out right before our eyeballs. Many of us will head to YouTube to watch trailers in full 1080p HD, but when we want to see the games we love (or are interested in) in action, minus the post-editing sheen or without the constant commentary of a Let’s Play video, then we head to Twitch, where anything goes as long as its live. Indeed, Twitch has brought us many a gaming nugget, from game announcements, to hour long streams of unreleased titles to new gaming experiences in themselves, such as Twitch Plays Pokémon and now, YouTube are reportedly set to buy the livestreaming service for $1 billion.

While it’s easy to explain the decision as ‘Twitch is successful, YouTube wants in on that’, the reason may be more complex. While YouTube is owned by Google and it does allow for YouTube livestreams as well as Google Hangouts, Twitch is still a significant piece of the video viewing pie that YouTube likely can’t ignore any longer. But the company hasn’t just had to convince Twitch’s founders that they will continue to improve the service for gamers (rather than turning it into a corporate cash cow that has lost sight of its core audience) as YouTube has also had to fend off competition from Microsoft and several venture capitalists who have all put their names in the hat as potential buyers.

However, despite YouTube being considered as “the best” buyout option for the company by the team behind Twitch, they are also said to be looking at investment funding as opposed to a total sale of the company. Not only this but sources explain that the “deal isn’t imminent” suggesting that despite being the frontrunners in the buyout options, YouTube’s purchase of Twitch is still a long way from final.

We’ll keep you posted once we know more.

Source: Polygon

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