WePlay stripped Ceh9 of accreditation for PGL Major Stockholm 2021
Anton PashencevA former professional CS: GO player who is now engaged in streaming activities and is a commentator for the Maincast studio, Arseniy "ceh9" Trynozhenko lost his accreditation for PGL Major Stockholm 2021. Arseniy went to the venue, where he filmed interviews with players and videos from the under-stands for his personal the channel, however, lost the rights to coverage for a reason unknown to us.
Perhaps the copyright holder for the official broadcast of the major in the CIS, WePlay studio, revoked its accreditation due to the recording of several stories on Instagram from the championship venue for competitors represented by Maincast, but WePlay themselves have not yet commented on the situation.
The head of the Maincast studio Vitaly "v1lat" Volochay expressed his opinion on the current situation:
“Banning a channel on Twitch for piracy is okay. I support this, and I have always been completely on the side of the copyright holders, so I have no questions here. for a trifle the channel is banned or not, it does not matter. The copyright holder has the right to do so. But to deprive Senya of accreditation, not just of some type, but Senya, who made awesome content from the Major, from the first tournament on LAN in two years, and to put him outside the door of this very tournament ON THE FIRST DAY is banal disgusting. The watchman's syndrome in action ”.
The former teammate Arseny, the captain of Natus Vincere and the champion of the major tournament as part of Gambit Esports, Daniil "Zeus" Teslenko, also did not stand aside:
“I don’t want to get involved in this showdown. But is it the right thing to do? Because of such an oversight? There are warnings, there are penalties in the end. @ cehebu4}} }} }} }} }} }} }}[worked]in major and made awesome content, all so inspired. And now I call him and he says I'm going home bye. "
As a reminder, PGL Major Stockholm 2021 runs from October 26 to November 7 at the Avicii Arena in Stockholm, Sweden. Participants fight for a prize pool of $ 2,000,000, with only six teams remaining in the fight.