Discord, the Slack-like chat and streaming app that's become a preferred gathering place for online gamers, is about to get a little less musical.
The music-streaming bot called, Rhythm, a third-party plugin for Discord servers that lets users stream in music (or really any audio) directly from YouTube, is going offline. The service will cease functioning on Sept. 15 in response to a cease and desist legal demand from Google.
"One way or another we knew this was due to happen eventually," Rhythm creator Yoav told The Verge. "Which is why we started working on something new a year ago." The same report also notes that the death of Rhythm comes only a few weeks after Google moved to kill off a similar music bot, called Groovy. (The fun ended for Groovy on Aug. 30.)
Yoav hinted that work is underway on something else "in the music space" that will tie to Discord in some way, but the specifics beyond that aren't clear at this point. But the Rhythm creator also sees the death of their bot, along with Groovy, as sort of canaries in the coal mine for other cease and desist requests aimed at music bot creators.
It's just the nature of how Discord works. Plugins like Rhythm integrate with the platform seamlessly. I've used Yoav's creation extensively myself, and piping music into voice chat is as simple as pointing the bot to a list of links or even just one link to a pre-made YouTube playlist. The bot isn't officially endorsed or supported by DIscord; the platform is just flexible enough to allow the thing to exist.
That means Discord has an easier time dodging any responsibility for how people use the platform. But it also leaves the creators of music bots and other quality-of-life features exposed to potential repercussions themselves.
Though in truth, it's not clear exactly what Rhythm (or Groovy, or any other music bot) does that's such a problem. Discord servers — that's what each privately curated social space on the platform is called — canbe monetized, but most of them aren't. So the most common use for something like Rhythm is friends streaming music together while they game.
SEE ALSO: Telegram will let 1,000 people join a video call but it still won't touch revenge pornIt's possible that YouTube is making these moves because it may have a Discord-connected offering of its own in the works. At the end of 2021, Discord revealed that it's toying with new options for partying up and playing games together on a server, and that feature appears to include a YouTube Together watch party bot. But it's not something that just anyone can use at this point.
This is one of those natural growing pains that all social media platforms tend to endure as they grow in size and in profile. Rhythm essentially got too big for its own good; The Verge report notes that the bot lives on more than 20 million servers. There are still plenty of native options built into Discord for people who want to pipe audio or video into their group voice chats. Bots like Rhythm and Groovy simply streamlined that process and made it easier. Hopefully, Google's eventual officially sanctioned successor will do the same, assuming it comes to fruition.
Copyright © 2023 Powered by
YouTube killed Discord's most popular music bot, Rhythm-啜英咀华网
sitemap
文章
24664
浏览
2
获赞
56917
Mia Farrow's Twitter account is joyfully bizarre
Stream of consciousness writing made for great 20th century fiction, and now it's coming for 21st ceDave Jorgenson chats about life as the Washington Post TikTok guy, his love of Spam, and more
Welcome to Small Talk, a series where we catch up with the internet's favorite Extremely Online indiApple now says you can use disinfecting wipes on iPhone screens
Congratulations, iPhone owners: You can officially use disinfecting wipes to keep your phone free ofSamsung Galaxy Z Flip isn't even out yet and there's already a golden, Joker
Samsung's upcoming foldable phone, the Galaxy Z Flip, is basically still in rumor stage, but that diCoronavirus is not the man now dog: YTMND is back, and just in time
The pandemic profoundly alters our sense of time. Quarantine grinds lives to a halt, injecting themHTC's Exodus 5G router can be a Bitcoin node
After launching two cryptocurrency-oriented smartphones, the HTC Exodus 1 and the Exodus 1s, the comApple's affordable new iPhone probably won't be launched in March
A few months ago, rumors pointed toward an Apple event in late March, with the focus being an affordFCC confirms wireless carriers broke the law by selling location data
The other shoe is about to drop for wireless carriers that violated customer privacy. On Friday, theDonald Trump is back on Twitch after a short ban for ‘hateful conduct’
How long will you get banned from Twitch for disparaging immigrants on multiple livestreams?The answAgainst All Odds: How Netflix Made It
Home video rentals were already a $16 billion industry when Reed Hastings and Marc Randolph decidedE3 2020 has officially been canceled (UPDATE)
UPDATE: March 13, 2020, 11:26 a.m. CET The E3 has officially been canceled. "After careful consultatMic on Bezos' hacked phone possibly compromised for months
What secrets does Jeff Bezos spill behind closed doors?The Amazon CEO and owner of the Washington PoBest desktop companions to make working from home less lonely
Remember desktop pets? In the very early days of the web, they came in many forms (cats, ants, cockrTrump's campaign exploited default opt
Trump is gone from the White House, but his supporters are still feeling the hurt of his campaign'sApple's next iPhone might have a 3D depth camera on the back
That cool 3D depth camera in the iPhone 11's notch? This year, a similar one might appear on the iPh