Twitch Sues Makers of Bots That Boost Viewer Counts

Some bots are helpful, like Facebook's NBA bot

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Microsoft's Taycheating bots

The popular game-streaming platform Twitch

"We at Twitch are well aware that view-bots, follow-bots, and chat-impersonation bots are a persistent frustration," the company's marketing VP Matthew DiPietro wrote in a blog post

The defendants named in the lawsuit peddle their bot services through websites with rather obvious names, like "TwitchViewerBot.com" and "StreamViewers.com." One defendant, Erik Bouchouev, operates five separate websites, offering bot packages that range from $9.99 per month for 75 viewers to $38.99 per month for 475 viewers, according to the complaint.

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"These deceptive actions inflate viewer statistics for some channels while harming legitimate broadcaster channels by decreasing their discoverability," Twitch argued in the complaint. "That, in turn, hurts the quality of the experience community members have come to expect from Twitch."

In addition to asking the court to shut the bot services down, Twitch is also seeking unspecified restitution and damages.

The company says the court case is the latest part of its ongoing crusade to eradicate artificial bots from its network. It also uses "technological solutions" to detect false viewers and remove them, and encourages users to report suspected bots to its moderators and customer support reps.

This article originally appearedPCMag.com