Application HOT Live Broadcast No Banned

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LIVE STREAMING IN INDONESIA

temukan pasangan anda di live streaming china , anda bisa berkencan ber intraksi kepada sesama lewat aplikasi ini,
anda juga bisa mencari pasangan lewat aplikasi live streaming

download aplikasi nya di bawah ini

Download apk Live Streaming In Indonesia




What's it about?


After logging in through Facebook, Instagram, or a phone number, users view live broadcasts or stream their own live video. The terms of service state that the app is meant for users 18 and older, though much younger teens are frequently broadcasting. Viewers comment and send gifts to broadcasters, while broadcasters respond to comments and interact with viewers. Immediately upon logging in to a broadcast, viewers see a reminder that violent or sexual content is prohibited, along with an email address to report issues. Viewers can subscribe to broadcasters or report them through their profiles, and broadcasters can block other users' comments. Broadcasters can share through myriad social media that they are live streaming, and users can purchase coins to give as gifts.

Is it any good?

The appeal of live video streaming is clear -- some people get famous, and others thrive on the immediate connection and feedback, however shallow -- but is it appropriate for tweens and teens? Parents will want to arm kids with solid digital literacy before letting them broadcast or view (if they allow it at all). It's worth noting that most broadcasts are completely uneventful: One user had music playing while showing his ceiling, and many others showed bored-looking teens staring at their screens, saying "Hi, spam my Instagram" and asking for likes and follows. No one was showcasing talent or meaningful content. However, another featured the broadcaster and commenters trading racial slurs and profanity, and another showed 10-year-olds and a 13-year-old being asked to dance provocatively and show body parts. In all cases, the broadcasters called out their inappropriate commenters and/or blocked them. But would most kids respond in the same way? If tweens and teens want to use it, parents may want to set clear boundaries on where it can be used (is behind closed bedroom doors OK?) and equip them with how to handle rude, obnoxious, or inappropriate commenters. Teens also freely shared their other social media handles with strangers, so knowing how to stay safe and maintain privacy is another critical element.

Talk to your kids about ...

  • Families can talk about general privacy and safety online, and check in with your kid about new content posted and viewed. What information isn't safe to share with strangers? If your family decides live streaming is OK, what are the rules around it?
  • Make sure kids understand that adults and teens both may be using the app and that it's up to them to protect their privacy. What's your kid's username? Where will he or she create posts? What kinds of comments warrant reporting?


    App details


Growing quietly but steadily over the past five years, the live-streaming industry has become a viable source of income for many thousands across the globe, but nowhere is it more lucrative than in China. The country’s live-stream industry was worth upwards of $3 billion in 2016, increasing 180% year over year. However, a number of factors have been working together to curtail that growth of late.

A Fortune Made On Followers

Wei Liuyuan isn’t a household name in China, but to the one million people who follow her on Chinese social app Momo, she is their superstar.
From her home in Shanghai, the 29-year-old, who goes by the online alias Qing Wu, spends at least eight hours a day broadcasting herself on Momo, one of China’s many live streaming platforms. Her show is a mix of dances ranging from hip-hop to classic Chinese. Whenever she performs a particularly difficult move such as exotic pole dance, her viewership surges and fans will shower Wei with virtual gifts from the app. Last year, Wei made 2.5 million yuan ($380,000) from these online gifts.


Consolidation

However, despite the rapid growth of the industry, there are signs that it is beginning to mature. Many of the hundreds of apps that were available a year ago are no longer supported or have disappeared, and further consolidation is likely in the near future. "There are still too many players," said IHS Markit analyst Jun Wen Woo. "Acquisition will happen."
This is not to say that the industry is about to disappear entirely. Live streaming has become a mainstay of the Chinese media diet, particularly for younger people, and despite a shrinking number of platforms, revenue remains high. Woo points to increasing mobile penetration and affordable mobile data plans as a key factor.  “This is a huge market,” she says. “There is a 1.13 billion smartphone install base in China.”
Over the past year, though, the seeming strength of this industry has been eroded from within, particularly by government regulation, which has begun to crack down on streamers that may be producing content deemed unfit for Chinese audiences.

Regulation

In late 2016, a formal set of regulations for live-streaming platforms were set down, giving the government the ability to reprimand and streamers who would  “harm national security, damage social stability, disturb societal order, violate the rights of others or broadcast obscene or erotic activities.”
Although not every live-streaming platform was affected by these measures, the government also took steps to rein in individuals, even going so far as to ban foreigners from live-streaming into China.
Weibo, one of China’s largest social networks, was forced to cease all live-stream content in June  “due to their lacking of an internet audio/video program transmission license and posting of certain commentary programs with content in violation of government regulations on their sites,” said the company in a statement. The ban also affected up to 30 other streaming platforms, shuttering a number of already-struggling companies and forcing others to hire teams of real-time monitors who would shut down offensive on obscene streams.


Weibo’s stock plummeted in the wake of the ban, losing $1 billion of the company’s market capitalization, while People’s Daily, a government-controlled newspaper, called the closures “a victory of positive energy against negative energy.”

The New Normal

In the wake of these crackdowns, the number of live streaming platforms has fallen by 60% percent year-on-year. The majority of funding for live-streaming platforms now goes to the top companies in the sector, squeezing out the smaller players and rewarding those who play by the rules. According to a report by TrustData, 97.5% of the total user engagement was on the top 10 platforms over the past year.
Elijah Whaley,  CMO of ParkLu, a company which manages and promotes Chinese live-streamers, remains optimistic for the future of live-streaming in the country. He points out that live-streaming's key strength lies in diversity. “Mass programming cannot satisfy niche interests,” he argues.
He accepts that government regulations may have an impact, but argues that the medium has a bright future, particularly due to its mobile-friendly nature. “Live streaming will standardize to generate predictable value that keeps audiences tuning in. It has a very bright future. It's content democratization.”
That democratization faces a clear threat in the Middle Kingdom, however. According to the latest regulations, live-streamers must now record all video streaming content for 60 days for potential regulatory checkup and all streamers must register with real names. In a medium that prizes spontaneity and, at times, anonymity, these steps are anathema to what previously allowed live-streamers to flourish in China.
It remains to be seen whether these measures will significantly curtail the growth of the industry overall, but in one form or another, it appears that the golden days of live-streaming in China are behind us.

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