![]() Back in September, 2014, Azubu announced an exclusivity deal with the Korean eSports Association where all players on KeSPA teams would stream on Azubu.Īs Azubu's director of content, Matthew Gunnin said at the time: "These organizations have never streamed before and have chosen to work exclusively with Azubu to showcase their players and teams in the highest quality possible." Essentially it's been setting itself up as a premium content platform. ![]() Anyone can watch but, unlike with Twitch, only top players and teams are allowed broadcasting rights. The other important point is that Riot can deny the use of their IP at any time and for any reason.Īzubu is a video game streaming platform which specialises in eSports. For anything where you're asking people to pay and it's not via advertising you need to get Riot's permission. That covers activity like Twitch streaming and YouTube videos. There's a lot of information on the page but the golden rule, as Riot puts it, is that "you can use League of Legends IP as the basis for a fan project that you’re giving away for free or that’s only generating ad revenue". A lot of companies have this kind of legal information available so they can let fans know what they can stream or upload and how they're allowed to use the characters in fan projects. Riot has a Legal Jibber Jabber page - a set of guidelines online where it lays out what fans can and can't do with its League of Legends intellectual property. Here's a summary of what's going on and why it's important. The channel has been subject to a DMCA takedown order from rival streaming service Azubu and the ensuing argument taps into how streamers can use intellectual property. It revolves around SpectateFaker a Twitch channel set up to stream games featuring the professional player Faker. Evening all! This edition of Dote Night is about the current content rights argument going on in League of Legends.
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