theory

canaries and camwhores in the coal mine: a qgcon talk

I celebrated my birthday this year by presenting some research at the Queerness and Games Conference in Montreal. I’ve been looking at what it means to be doing digital work in the contemporary economy, and what it means for those who make their livings online. In particular, I’ve been looking at Twitch streamers who have been branded as “titty streamers” (or otherwise) with my colleague, Amanda Cullen, and UCI faculty, Bo Ruberg.

Suffice to say that a lot of my time has been spent sifting through vitriolic Reddit comments and YouTube “analysis” videos of what makes a “Twitch thot.” More on that to come, hoo boy. The bright spot in all of this was that I got to share the early stages of this work with the wonderful folks at QGCon — and what better test audience than the radically queer games scene?

Below is my talk, in full, and its accompanying slides are here.


My name is Kat Brewster, I’m a second-year PhD student at the University of California, Irvine. This is the title of my presentation, and here is a joke about it.

Anyway. But for real. What is this presentation about?

[SLIDE]

It’s about: Labour models on lean, privately owned digital platforms. Models which have allowed for the gig economy to flourish – or, if you like, the “sharing-economy” and the “on-demand work economy,” and all the other things we call it. The platforms which facilitate these models are often called lean: they rely on users to do the legwork while direct employees maintain and run the platform upon which that labour is sourced. These are platforms like Uber, AirBnb, and Paypal as well as (I believe), YouTube, Twitch, Twitter, Snapchat, Patreon, etc. etc.

Those who use these platforms to provide their primary source of income has increased exponentially over the past decade. However, these platforms’ systems of remuneration is often opaque and fragile. It relies on unstable metrics for growth and sustainability, and reinforces fraught relationships of affective labour.

Within recent months, platforms like Twitch and Patreon and PayPal have made significant changes to their terms of service or community guidelines. Several of these platforms have been reacting to – either directly or indirectly – consequences of FOSTA/SESTA. FOSTA/SESTA is an item of legislation which purports to protect at-risk individuals from sex trafficking online. A side effect of this legislation has made for a drastically different internet landscape for those platforms reliant on user generated content. I hope to show how this legislations affects not only sex workers, but anyone involved in work on a digital platform.

[SLIDE]

I wish I had hours and hours to discuss this with everyone in this room, but in sharing the stage with my inimitable colleagues, I have only allotted myself ten to twelve minutes to give you a brief overview of the landscape as it stands for further research. For your general interest, or -- for the academics among you – your perusal, here is a brief list of the literature, thinkers, and workers who have served as a foundation for my own work.

[SLIDE]

I have tried to approach their work, and my research, with the following huge, glaring, red-alert, Danger Will Robinson questions.

- First, what is a wage, and how do we understand it in the labour we perform? How has this been changed in the contemporary gig/sharing/whatever economy?

- Second, how might our understanding of a wage become alienated or otherwise obfuscated from the labour which supposedly is what produces those wages?

- Thirdly, and most importantly, who is most at risk on these fragile financial models? How? Why? And how, in future, can we protect them?

[SLIDE]

Now, the phrase “digital platform,” is likely old hat to us tech-savvy aficionados. But I’ve danced around the phrase, “lean platform” for a good while here, so let me clear some things up: a lean platform, crucially, is one which “attempts to reduce their ownership of assets to a minimum and to profit by reducing costs as much as possible.” A lean platform prioritises a model of growth before profit. Think Uber, AirBnB, YouTube… None of these platforms engage in the production of what they are famous for providing. It is, instead, provided by users, on-demand.

Now, on the one hand, this on-demand model offers ostensibly flexible work hours, a wealth of job opportunities, and the freedom to pursue remote work.

[SLIDE]

For employers, labour and transaction costs are significantly reduced when hiring workers on a per-contract basis. On the other hand, this has the potential to lead to a commodification of unregulated labour. In the words of the CEO of CrowdFlower, a company which utilizes this model…

The worker in this labour model is only useful (and only employed) when producing a surplus value – what might be considered the ideal capitalist work scenario. In the perfect gig economy, no work goes unpaid and no nonwork is compensated.

The problem with the hyperbolic “ideal capitalist work scenario,” of course, lies in the historical relationship of unwaged labour in capitalism and the history of unpaid labour – which is closely tied with the wage. In her feminist reconsideration of housework as unwaged labour, Silvia Federici declares that:

[SLIDE]

under capitalism every worker is manipulated and exploited and his or her relation to capital is totally mystified. The wage gives you the impression of the fair deal: you work and you get paid, hence you and your boss each get what’s owed; while in reality the wage, rather than paying for the work you do, hides all the unpaid work that goes into profit.

[SLIDE]

So let’s talk Twitch:

Twitch is owned by Amazon. I cannot even begin to unpack that here. Twitch also self-reports that there are 2,000,000+ broadcasts a month, and only 2,000 partnered streamers. And so, there is a very slim chance that anyone who has a Twitch account can even begin to imagine that they are a temporarily embarrassed Twitch Partner. Even for those who apply and are approved to become Twitch partners, a fewer number still can say that their revenue from Twitch pays them a living wage. Twitch does not make these numbers available to the public, or upon inquiry. And yet – Twitch puts this page on every streamer’s dashboard:

[SLIDE]

The “Path to Partner,” is a series of achievements, given to every streamer regardless of whether or not they’ve applied to partnership. It is simply assumed to be something they want, and here is how they need to do it. In this way, it is understood that this is how one might succeed on Twitch.

[SLIDE]

On Twitch, a “successful” streamer’s work schedule is not simply livestreaming: In addition to the eight-hour days in front of a webcam, streamers self-report additional planning, secretarial work, administrative work, chat room moderation, website maintenance, equipment maintenance, and fan relations. Even for those who maintain this diverse set of skill required to succeed on Twitch, income is a frustratingly opaque system – further obfuscated with microtransactions, on-platform currencies, fluctuating ad revenue systems (which must navigate both seasonality, time of day, views per day, and ad-blocking plugins), affiliate links, donations, merchandise sales and potentially, Patreon pledges. Not to mention all the various layers of nuance and internet grammar which accompany any and all of these revenue models.

Many streamers self-report a fraught relationship with income and their mental health simultaneously – feeling a sense of obligation to fans, and not wanting to feel like they are asking for money too overtly, lest their fans feel that they are ungrateful, or money-hungry.

So, how are streamers’ activities mediated through Twitch to generate the wealth they do accrue, and how this is compounded by affective labour – self presentation, chat and fan moderation, domestic labour, sexual labour – and especially that labour which comes from at-risk groups.

Because who is at risk here?

[SLIDE]

Here are a sampling of streamers who I have looked at specifically for their larger audiences, affective relationships with fans and viewers, and the charged conversations which have carried on around them – what might otherwise be called “Twitch drama.”

From the top left and going clockwise, the streamers seen here are: Dr Disrespect and Ninja, Kaceytron, ZombiUnicorn, Zoie Burgher, OMGLove, Abigale Mendler, PewDiePie and Alinity. While they are a light smattering of nationalities, they are predominantly white and arguably, conventionally attractive. They are also, insofar as I am aware, cisgendered and heterosexual. They perform in ways which have been read as hypermasculine or hyperfeminine, and often in a way which has been read as sexually charged.

Or, perhaps more plainly, people have been made aware of their own sexuality by looking at some of these streamers, and got angry about it. Or, one of these streamers became aware of their own sexuality and they got angry at someone else about it.

All of them have also, at some point or another, made their primary source of income either from Twitch or other overlapping digital platforms which purport to be primarily focused on the livestreaming of video games. All of them, also, have been subject to questioning about the following:

[SLIDE]

The Twitch Community Guidelines and Terms of Service. Now, the Twitch Terms of Service are RIFE – RIFE with affectively charged language. They implore their community, nay, their family to create the “best content” the world has ever seen, because it’s the streamers who make this community great. And this was seen most especially when Twitch updated their terms of service and community guidelines in February/March of this past year.

[SLIDE]

As a brief aside, when looking at the blog post Twitch wrote to address the new community guidelines, we can see some pretty significant comingling of affect and labour here, while those streamers who literally are Twitch report having a wage so confusing and obfuscating, they aren’t quite sure what their income will be each month.

[SLIDE]

You ARE Twitch. Yikes!

[SLIDE]

The largest changes to Twitch’s ToCs were to deal with Nudity, Pornography, and other sexual content, with special consideration given to Nudity and Attire.

[SLIDE]

Nudity and attire, Twitch claims, relates to the “public nature” of livestreaming. The way that you self-present, these guidelines suggest, determine how people were interpret your stream. They emphasise how people would interpret your clothing in “the real world.” They emphasise that you must wear clothing which would be contextually appropriate – fitness clothes for a workout stream, a swimsuit for the pool… But the bedroom – where many streamers perform – is left out of the conversation.

Other changes were to encourage cross-platform enforcement of these rules, so that streamers would be expected to uphold the values of Twitch on other digital platforms and social media sites, like YouTube or Twitter.

[SLIDE]

These changes came to mixed reviews – especially those rules for sexual content and harassment. This is a conversation had on Reddit, that bastion of internet etiquette, following a Twitch town hall about the community guidelines change. Calling streamers “camgirls,” Twitch said, may (or may not) qualify as harassment on Twitch. I emphasise “may not” here, because there still remains a confusing system of reporting harassment on Twitch -- but the specific word, “camgirl” and its more weaponized counterpart, “camwhore” definitely qualifies as harassment on the Twitch subreddit. Which, while not officially affiliated with Twitch, enjoys a heavy overlap with the platform, and is moderated heavily.

[SLIDE]

While we’re on the subject of camgirls, I would be remiss if I did not talk about camgirls. There is a heavy and prolific history of webcamming and sex work. “Camming” as a verb carries with it the connotation of performing sex work. Although, as Kacetron so eloquently puts it, everyone on Twitch is camming. Yet, As Twitch beats around the bush every year with moral-panics and crackdowns obsessed with their streamers’ attire, there are parallel crackdowns on digital platforms.

Four Chambers is an independent porn production company run by Vex Ashley. Vex has been very open about her recent frustrations with Patreon, a privately owned subscription service which allows creators all over the world to be directly supported by individuals. Unless, of course, they’re engaging in sex work. Or suggesting that they might be supporting sex work.

[SLIDE]

And so, they have been asked not to be on Patreon anymore due to Patreon’s relationship with conservative banks and payment processing servers, like PayPal – which has also removed sex workers from their system, keeping them from being able to receive payment safely and securely.

[SLIDE]

And they’ve been kicked off of Instagram, multiple times, due to Instagram’s unclear, uncommunicated, and conservative terms of service. Deplatforming sex workers in this way keeps them from achieving a safe and secure level of visibility which they control and offers them a level of agency and validity. It keeps sex workers from a legitimized income, because the platforms by which work is validated in contemporary contexts are privately owned, privately regulated.

People who turned to precarious labour models for any number of reasons: an economic recession left more traditional labour models no longer viable, or their identities are not in line with those who control or benefit from traditional labour models.

Those people are punished and exploited for their reliance on privately owned digital platforms which offered them that work in the first place.

[SLIDE]

And how is it happening now? FOSTA/SESTA Y’ALL. FOSTA/SESTA is a piece of legislations which encourages platforms to eradicate purportedly sexual content, and makes platforms more liable for the content which users publish on those platforms. Oh, and it was passed just before PayPal, Patreon, and Twitch’s guidelines were also changed – with their increased focus on sexual content and cross-platform behaviour.

[SLIDE]

So. What happens next? God, I don’t know. First of all, let camwhores play video games. Then, stop FOSTA/SESTA. Then, ask questions: ask these questions. And most importantly remember the following:

[SLIDE]

Protect sex workers.

What We Talk About When We Talk About Agency: Part Two of Question Mark Parts, or: Non-Normative Play

“Haha, wow, Kat,” you are saying to yourself. “That sure was a lot of theory you talked about in your last post about agency. Also, kind of a bummer – talking about existential hopelessness, illusions of agency, and people being not so chill?”

“Yeah, dude. I know. Probably a lot of that theory was unnecessary.”

“Maybe we could have a recap?”

Can-do, strawman. We have agency in digital space as Murray defined it in 1998, which is the opportunity to see the meaningful consequences of our decisions and choices.

Then, we have agency in the digital space as I, a presumptuous Kathryn Brewster, have decided to define it almost 20 years later: Agency is the set of actions we choose to make and imbue with meaning in the face of existentialist dread, which, in turn, is the overwhelming nausea we feel when confronted with limitless choice in the universe.

But dang, it definitely feels like we don't have limitless choice in linear video games. When looking at the dialogue wheels we are given, they feel paltry compared to the nearly limitless options we have when deciding, for example, what moves to play in chess (which, by the way, has more potential board positions than there are atoms in the knowable universe (!!!)). Where we get hung up is on the word meaningful which is SUPER subjective!

When playing most games with dialogue wheels, we are told that the story choices we make through dialogue is what matters, and we assume that what makes those story choices meaningful is that it affects the narrative which takes place within the confines of the gameworld as it is presented on the screen. All those pesky and hardwired if/if else commands, which are just going to loop back around to give us the same dang story anyway.

So. Where do we, as players, get to find meaning?

I’m going to go out on a limb here, and say that meaningful autonomous play in the digital space comes from play which recognises the extent of that autonomy as players within that space. It's a combination of recognising how we have to operate within the confines of the gameworld, and then experimenting with all the ways we can operate within those constraints, mining for meaning. Sometimes we see this in more technical feats, like speed runs. How can I, as a player, behave the most efficiently when presented with gameful constraints which, by their very nature, exist to constrain my free activity?

In turn, this kind of play can change how we feel about the experience as a whole. Playstyles start to acknowledge not just technical constraints, but flavourful, experiential ones. For example: in Dishonored, Corvo is given non-lethal options to neutralise enemies. So, what does it mean if you still choose the lethal option, knowing full well that to behave nonviolently is a viable option? Dunno, man. That's between you and Corvo.

Play which subverts the typically designed experience, often the AAA Hollywood-linear model, I've taken to calling "non-normative play," and it takes a lot of forms:

Technical challenges, like speed runs, percentage runs, and completionist runs are fairly atypical from the average play experience, and generally focus on high-efficiency within added or existing constraints.

Experiential challenges, like pacifist runs, genocide runs, and other narrative-justification heavy playthroughs take a given narrative, and subvert the co-authorship model of game design to give more weight to the player's interpretations of events.

As a side note, pacifism/genocide is a popular non-normative playstyle, as it's a fairly good mixture of tangible technique and flavourful experience.

Then there are, for lack of a better word and keeping with an existential theme, absurdist challenges. Absurdist play says, "I'm going to take the tools you have given me, Game, and use them as a platform for something entirely different, and largely removed from the overall narrative or theme of mechanics." A good example of this last one might be the McElroy's Monster Factory series, or Pippin Barr's permadeath speed run of Half-Life 2.

This is not to say that a playstyle must fall into either one category or the other, but rather to consider all the various webs and overlaps alternative playstyles have to offer! There are a bunch, and increasingly, there is really no "normal" play experience to be had.

___

Further thoughts: As I consider all of these runs and playstyles, I wonder what it means when the style of play is organic and community-grown, versus when these playstyles are offered in the design of the game. Does it mean more to kill nobody in F3NV than in Dishonored because there's no achievement for it? Will we continue to see an increase in game design which offers meaningful and thematically harmonious alternative playstyles, as in Undertale, and if so, do we lose a sense of agency because of it? 

What We Talk About When We Talk About Agency: Or, Say Yes to Limits – Part One of Question Mark Parts

At the beginning of April, I spoke at the Association of Art Historian’s 2016 conference in Edinburgh (I made a game about it the night before my talk, which is full of typos, but if you’re interested in the mindset of someone presenting at a conference for the first time in their lives and is terrified about it, go give it a play). I was talking about the aesthetics of agency in digital gameplay, and how one could look at similar themes explored in the canon of art history, and how games have since moved away from these themes to come into their own as a medium which can utilize its unique strength to convey meaning through a dialectical and dynamic process. It was pretty rad. 

At the end of my talk, I was approached and asked about my definition of agency – which was, for the record, Janet Murray’s definition from Hamlet on the Holodeck. It’s a classic. “Agency is the satisfying power to take meaningful action, and see the results of our decisions and choices.” Nice one, J.M. 

My argument took this definition and suggested that the creation of emergent narratives is a form of agency, and reading environments to create those emergent narratives an act of creative faculty. 

"That book was written in 1998,” this person said to me. “Murray was writing in a different time – and the agency you talk about – it seems pretty restrictive, don’t you think? And the games you cite are so linear. The agency one has in the gallery space is fundamentally different from the agency in the gamespace. That agency is designed by game designers. What you’re talking about is the illusion of agency. You’re being manipulated by game designers.”

"Ah,” I said.

Look. I get it. This is a can of worms, and I know it. Agency is a huge topic in philosophy and sociology – let alone a buzzword within the climate of contemporary game design. Open-world games love to flaunt the agency they afford their players, and we still get mad at them. (Here’s looking at you, Fallout 4 and also the-ending-of-Mass-Effect-3.) “You can ride a horse in Red Dead Redemption! You can pick flowers in Skyrim! The world in No Man’s Sky is SO BIG EVEN WE DO NOT KNOW HOW FAR IT WILL GO! AGENCY!!!!!” (This is how I imagine all marketing for games to sound in my head.)

I guess what I’m trying to say is that a lot of people have written about agency. If it interests you, I encourage you to go and pick up some Descartes or Bourdieu or Giddens, but I’m gonna talk about the theory and mechanics of agency in contemporary game design, and I do not claim to have any semblance of a mastery over those guys’ opinions on it and I’m gonna do it anyway.*  

So, Janet Murray wrote Hamlet on the Holodeck, and anybody who is anybody in the field of game design has likely read it – it outlines a series of important concepts present in digital storytelling and gaming, including, but not limited to, agency – defined above. Agency, Murray says, is integral to facilitating immersion and achieving a transformative experience through play.

Basically: do something, see something happen, leave the gamespace a changed person. Likely the thing which happens is going to be internally consistent with the laws of action you know about the world – the paltry laws of physics, for example. We exhibit this kind of agency all the time in our day-to-day lives, learning how to make actionable choices, calling on the affordances of objects, contextualising their relationship to interactivity (shoutout to Donald Norman’s The Design of Everyday Things). Murray offers the satisfying power of double-clicking on a desktop icon to open a program or file on the computer. It was the 90s and that shit was powerful, you guys. 

To some, it would seem, this definition of agency feels outdated -- especially given today’s gaming landscape. Choices in Games has been a super-hot-button issue for a while, and people really love to criticise the Illusion of Choices in Games. Consider the dialogue trees in The Walking Dead or Dragon Age and Mass Effect which all just loop you around to everyone getting the same story at the end of the day (occasionally with tricoloured icing to make it feel different). There’s the famous and decidedly not-choice of saving or harvesting Little Sisters in Bioshock, and the devastating fact that I can’t romance Nick Valentine in Fallout 4 because Bethesda has it out for me personally. “I don’t really have the choice!” Gamers everywhere cry out. “I can’t do everything in this so called ‘open world,’ so it SUCKS.” 

And they have a point – to a degree. Yes, it’s ridiculous that in a game where I can shoot a guy’s head clean off his shoulders, I can’t shoot open a locked door. That’s not internally consistent with the laws of action for the world I occupy. But here’s the thing: it is internally consistent with the laws of the gamespace I occupy in play, and I sign a contract to occupy that space when I pick up a game controller. By pressing START I say, “I am relinquishing the laws and constraints of reality and giving myself over to the particular constraints of a game reality.” Sure, that world may walk like a duck and talk like a duck, but here is the thing: it is not a duck and by duck I mean real world. These constraints which frustrate us in games mirror those we encounter in the real world, but because we aren’t socialised from birth to understand the constraints in games the way we are with the constraints of the physical world, we are SO MAD.**

We are always operating within constraints, whether they be social or physical or magical. Yes, I could strip naked at Home Depot and build a throne of 2x4s to sit upon and declare myself Emperor of all Home Depots, but I would likely be arrested for indecent exposure long before my reign could begin.***  Yes, I could try and write a haiku with more than 17 syllables, but I would likely run into linguistic trouble. Yes, I could shirk all formal education and try and get elected for congress, but I think my potential constituents would take issue with my non-normative background.**** Operating outside the laws of society is going to cause you a lot of trouble and frustration in the long-run, and in order to tangibly further our place within a society that rewards certain behaviours and punishes others, we must operate within constraints. This is just how things go. Cultural disruption has its place, and is often needed, but even there we operate within the constraints which contextualises that disruption. You cannot escape constraints. You are literally constrained to constraints. Any agency you feel you have in the real world is illusory. At this super melancholy point I turn to the existentialists, who ask whether the only free choice one has in the universe is the choice to die. Then I’m gonna get real bummed out real hard real quick. 

It is Camus who offers us a solution to this existentialist dread: imagine Sisyphus happy.  

In games, it can often feel like the only real choice we have is whether or not to play, whether or not to push the rock up the mountain – and though not as macabre as the choice offered by suicide, we can still imbue that choice with meaning in non-normative playstyles, like permadeath (though I’ve yet to see this done in ways I would like – this is a whole other blog post in the making). But if we remember that what a game fundamentally is is a set of constraints we choose to operate within, and remember that that is what makes a game fun and challenging, the choices we make within those constraints get a whole lot more meaningful. As players, we get the choice to play how we want to play, and players are constantly surprising even game’s designers with their play-choices, or with their imaginative-but-internally-consistent emergent narratives from even the most linear games (see: any fan theory ever, let alone playstyles).  

So, if the only agency I have within play is the internal meaning I imbue my actions with, are my player-character’s actions merely bumbling, meaningless interactions? I dunno, is the Super-Geniuses-Only game of chess just moving a bunch of funny-looking-blocks around on a funny-looking board? Is Sisyphus just interacting with a boulder? Or is there a relationship between agency and interactivity which, in practice, informs the other? Interactivity may be doing something and seeing something happen because of that action, but agency is having the choice to interact, and then, in turn, to assigning meaning to that interaction. When Sisyphus is interacting with the boulder, he is not a free agent. When Camus’ Sisyphus interacts with his boulder, and makes the choice to roll that rock up the mountain, is he a free agent, or nah? I dunno, you guys! This is where that can of worms becomes a kettle of fish, and where I leave you to ask your own questions which seem to be getting more existential and pretentious by the second. 

I suppose here is the question about agency which really interests me, moving away from whether or not I am being ‘manipulated’ by game designers: In order to perform as a free-agent in a gamespace, does my agency need to be subversive? Must I act outside the set narrative and perform a non-normative playstyle in order to truly explore the limits of my agency within a gamespace? And on TOP of that, is doing something radical purely for its own sake to test the limits of agency and not for any internal meaning more akin to meaningless interactivity we deride than the gloried and storied heights of Agency in Gameplay? Can I not just pick flowers in Skyrim and rise the ranks in the Thieves’ Guild and never touch the main narrative and still have a valid play experience?****** Why would I want to exist in a world where the internally consistent laws of play require that I can’t totally smooch Nick Valentine

These are the questions that keep me up nights, rolling rocks up mountains. 

_____

*#AGENCY

**Maybe this is why the main Angry Demographic of Games are cis-het white dudes? Who knows!!!!

*** A Conversation With A Strawman

**** This is NOT to say that these things cannot be done – just that it would likely be difficult, and we must weigh the opportunity cost of its achievability. In fact, as I’ll go on to suggest, attempting these to try and push the constraints of our day-to-day lives would likely offer up a superfun challenge.

*****If you care about game design, read this essay. 

******This is what my 80-hour Skyrim campaign looked like, so I’m gonna go ahead and say “Yeah, my dudes.”