Multiple far-right and white nationalist figures -- including some involved with the January 6 insurrection at the U.S. Capitol -- have shifted to the gaming-streaming platform Trovo, including using it to monetize their content. Some have used the platform to specifically defend the insurrection; one such person appears to be part of a special Trovo program that can help them raise additional money. Trovo’s policies seemingly prohibit white nationalist content and content not related to video games.
Following the insurrection, streaming platform DLive, known for hosting many far-right figures -- some of whom used the platform to livestream the riot -- announced that it would ban several of those accounts. It also announced it would demonetize content that is “deemed to only be appropriate for mature audiences,” which it says covers “virtually all non-gaming content.”
Since then, multiple far-right figures have started migrating to Trovo, a streaming platform from Tencent still in beta testing. (Tencent is China’s largest company and the operator of WeChat.) Trovo’s terms of service prohibit content that is “overly violent or promotes or depicts events involving self-harm, harm to another person or harm to animals” and content that is “threatening, abusive, libelous, slanderous, fraudulent, defamatory, deceptive, or otherwise offensive or objectionable.” The platform’s content guidelines also allow only content that is “relevant to video games and pop culture,” and they prohibit “overtly political or religious content that imposes upon others.”
Despite those rules, multiple far-right figures have used the platform, often uploading content that is not related to those specifically allowed topics. They’ve also sometimes used the platform to monetize their content indirectly -- or possibly directly, as the platform provides an avenue for creators to monetize via its digital currencies. Some of these figures have been directly tied to the insurrection.
Vincent James Foxx, a white nationalist who attended the January 6 rally and who is banned from YouTube and DLive, joined Trovo in January. From the platform, James has earned “subs” and “spells,” part of the platform’s digital currencies which potentially can be converted into actual money. His channel also promotes a link to his Entropy page, a platform from which people can pay creators. On Trovo, James has criticized former President Donald Trump for not “back[ing] his supporters during the Capitol siege” and for not pardoning them after.