While it’s hard to determine what precise figures are, there is an estimate that the laundered sum of money would be more than nine million dollars, with over 2400 Turkish streamers accused of a lot of involvement in this kind of process ranging from very low levels. And then the Twitch data breach happened. There were tons of information, especially to the creator’s pay data, that emerged about the whole group and the whole group of shammers, which were paid by a full total of five million people. And suddenly, the small, mid-sized streamers had a very large and very suspicious number attached to their name. A Turkish politician, Gursel Tekin, questioned the facts in a matter of political interest, clapping the Turkish Criminal Justice Investigation Board. Obviously Twitch had their own comments to discuss the situation, making a statement by a spokesperson, usable: Let’s face the situation in the end by providing a security alert to our community, not by allowing the actions to take seriously with a sanction against offenses engaged in. We continually battle and stop financial fraud on Twitch, and in September alone, we took action against over 150 partners in Turkey for using our monetization tool. You worked with those affected who reached out. SOURCE