French prosecutors have opened an investigation into the Australian video platform Kick over the dying of a content material creator throughout a livestream.
Raphaël Graven – also called Jean Pormanove – was discovered lifeless in a residence close to town of Good final week.
He was recognized for movies wherein he endured obvious violence and humiliation.
The Paris prosecutor mentioned the investigation would look into whether or not Kick “knowingly” broadcast “movies of deliberate assaults on private integrity”.
The BBC has approached Kick for remark. A spokesperson for the platform beforehand mentioned the corporate was “urgently reviewing” the circumstances round Mr Graven’s dying.
The prosecutor’s investigation may even search to find out if Kick complied with the European Union’s Digital Providers Act, and the duty on platforms to inform the authorities if the life or security of people is in query.
In a separate announcement, France’s minister for digital affairs, Clara Chappaz, mentioned the federal government would sue the platform for “negligence” over its failure to dam “harmful content material”, based on the AFP information company.
Mr Graven was discovered lifeless on 18 August.
Native media reported the 46-year-old had been topic to bouts of violence and sleep deprivation throughout streams, and died in his sleep throughout a reside broadcast.
Chappaz has beforehand described his dying as an “absolute horror”.
Kick is a platform much like Twitch. Customers can broadcast content material and work together with different customers in actual time.
“We’re deeply saddened by the lack of Jean Pormanove and prolong our condolences to his household, associates and group,” mentioned Kick in its earlier assertion.
The platform’s group tips had been “designed to guard creators” and Kick was “dedicated to upholding these requirements throughout our platform”, its spokesperson added.
