How tip-and-gift mechanics on TikTok LIVE, Bigo Live, YouNow, and Twitch can be used to bait or groom children — what to look for, how to switch features off, and where to report.
Most major livestreaming platforms now run on virtual gifts: viewers buy tokens with real money and send them to a broadcaster mid-stream, with a portion paid out as creator earnings. On TikTok LIVE, Bigo, YouNow, and parts of Twitch, this can turn a casual stream into a steady drip of attention from strangers — and gift-givers are visibly thanked by name on screen. For a child who is broadcasting, this creates a powerful feedback loop that can be exploited: gift-givers ask for specific outfits, songs, or behaviours, and the parasocial bond looks like friendship long before it looks like grooming. Ofcom and the NSPCC have repeatedly raised the safeguarding implications of these features for under-18s.
A predatory tipper typically starts as a generous viewer who comments often, sends small gifts, and praises the child. Over time the gifts get larger and conditional: 'I will send the next one if you sing this song / wear this top / do this dance / come on for a private call.' Because each gift is publicly thanked, other viewers see and copy the pattern. Some offenders use tipping to test what a child will do for money; some run multiple accounts to make the praise feel universal; some move the conversation to a side platform where the platform's own safety tools no longer apply. UK platforms must comply with the Online Safety Act 2023, but enforcement is uneven and most settings are off-by-default for under-18 broadcasting on these apps.
1. Turn broadcasting off, not just viewing
On every livestreaming app, separate the ability to watch from the ability to go live. Most platforms restrict live broadcasting to 16+ or 18+ — make sure the account uses the child's true date of birth so those restrictions actually apply.
2. Block gift-receiving
On TikTok and Bigo, gift-receiving for under-18s should be off; verify it. On Twitch, disable Bits and turn off donation links in the bio. On YouNow, restrict broadcaster eligibility.
3. Make live broadcasting a 'shared room' rule
If your teen is allowed to livestream, agree that it only happens in a shared family space, with no closed-bedroom streams. Most of the worst patterns rely on a closed-door setting.
4. Talk about the economics calmly
Explain that the platform takes a large cut of every gift, that gift-givers are not friends, and that any 'big tipper' wanting them to do something specific is a red flag — not a compliment.
ตรวจสอบล่าสุด: 2026-06-14
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