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Emiru’s Ordeal Sparks Twitch Security Revamp Following TwitchCon Assault Incident
- Image of Emiru, Courtesy of Emiru X (Titter) Media

Following a serious security failure at TwitchCon 2025, Twitch CEO Dan Clancy has issued a lengthy public apology to the streamer Emiru. He posted this apology directly on the platform’s official X account, where he took accountability for the incident that occurred during the streamer’s Meet and Greet. So how could such a breach occur despite the presence of security?

A Long Overdue Apology for Emiru

To Clancy, Twich failed not only in allowing the assault to happen, but also in their subsequent communications. As a result, the CEO offered a direct apology to Emiru for the entire ordeal. He admitted that Twitch failed both in allowing the assault to happen and in their subsequent communications, offering a direct apology to Emiru for the entire ordeal. Furthermore, Clancy outlined the company’s planned corrective actions. Moving forward, Twitch has initiated a complete analysis of the Meet and Greet incident and other issues that surfaced after the convention.

Furthermore, everything from the sign-up process and physical layout to implementing increased security controls will be thoroughly examined. Twitch is also releasing a comprehensive review of overall event safety, with updates promised for all future TwitchCons. Some of these security changes won’t be made public, but the company ensured the community will receive updates that directly impact them. Hopefully, this plan adequately addresses the core failures that caused this unfortunate situation.

Accountability Streams Live From the Top

The incident itself took place on October 17th, when a man bypassed multiple barriers at the San Diego Convention Center, grabbed Emiru’s face, and tried to kiss her. On the following day, Emiru addressed the situation on X, confirming the assault and noting that it could’ve been much worse. According to the streamer, Twitch security allowed the man to walk away rather than apprehend him. Clancy didn’t help matters when he made some puzzling comments in a later interview.

He suggested that streamers have more control during livestreams than in real life, which rubbed people the wrong way when they heard it with this bizarre comparison. Additionally, the CEO expressed personal concern for Emiru, calling her a friend. Even with Twitch’s direct apology, can they truly claim leadership in safety while such real-world failures persist? Given the fallout from this entire situation, protecting creators at physical events is an ongoing challenge that Twitch now must prove it takes seriously, not with words alone, but with action. After all, nobody should need a ban hammer in real life.

This article first appeared on Total Apex Gaming and was syndicated with permission.

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