Chris Pavlovski, the CEO of livestreaming platform Rumble, took to Twitter on July 13, 2023, to call out controversial internet personality Adin Ross. In his post, Pavlovski said “spammers”were attempting to destroy the platform’s reputation by creating “fake narratives”with the help of artificial followers. He also attached three photos from Ross’ recent livestream as evidence.
Pavlovski seemingly threatened action by stating that Rumble’s legal team has gone up against power companies and governments. The tweet reads:
“Spammers trying to destroy Rumble’s reputation by creating a fake narrative with bots won’t be treated with white gloves Our legal team takes on some of the biggest companies and most powerful governments in the world. If you think you are immune, you are in for a surprise.”
“Tighten up”- Adin Ross responds to the Rumble CEO’s threatening tweet
Spammers trying to destroy Rumble’s reputation by creating a fake narrative with bots won’t be treated with white gloves
Our legal team takes on some of the the biggest companies and most powerful governments in the world. If you think you are immune, you are in for a surprise pic.twitter.com/XFVjVGYoyL
— Chris Pavlovski (@chrispavlovski) July 13, 2023
Adin Ross has been outspoken about his sentiments towards Rumble. During his recent Kick livestream, the Florida native went off at Nico “Sneako”for criticizing the Trainwreckstv-backed platform. He then drew a comparison between Kick, Rumble, and Twitch, stating:
“Kick literally implemented an update where you can check mark basically saying if you want to display Hot Tub streamers and Gambling streams. So, Twitch doesn’t have that. Rumble doesn’t have that. Kick did it.”
Ross also addressed Rumble streamers, telling them to “stay in their own lane”:
“To all, you Rumble creators, Kick stays in their own lane. You are not the enemy. It’s Twitch. Rumble, in all fairness, no disrespect, Rumble you are not competition to Kick.”
As mentioned earlier, on July 13, Chris Pavlovski claimed that “spammers”were attempting to destroy the Toronto-based company’s image and attached images from Adin Ross’ broadcast.
In response, Ross stated that he instructed his fans to type the phrase “spam fumble”in the Kick chat room. He said:
“Chris… on my stream, when I said, ‘Spam fumble,’ it was in my chat, not your website. Also – that tweet got nothing to do with me, brother. Tighten up.”
Chris… on my stream when I said spam fumble it was in my chat 😂 not your website. Also – that tweet got nothing to do with me brother. Tighten up.
— adin (@adinross) July 13, 2023
According to Twitter user @JABridgeforth, the issue was with the Twitter userbase, not Ross:
This is more of a @twitter problem and less of a Adin problem.
— JA (@JABridgeforth) July 13, 2023
Kick streamer Rangesh “N3on” responded as well, claiming that “someone randomly”botted his social media update to get over 6,000 likes. He added that he deleted the tweet after seeing the engagement numbers:
it was at 4 am and had nothing to do with me. the tweet was at 3k likes and someone randomly botted 6k likes on it. I don’t know what they got out of it. but i get nothing out of botting a ratio tweet that obviously looks like a bot.
— N3on (@N3onOnYT) July 13, 2023
the second i saw the likes i deleted the tweet
— N3on (@N3onOnYT) July 13, 2023
Here are some more pertinent fan reactions:
CEO of rumble tweeting this??? how about u focus on fixing ur UI and general website, than staying cryin on the TL about one of ur signees getting ratioed 😭 website been out for 11 years and it’s still doesn’t look one bit pleasing that’s crazy 😂😂
— FearBuck (@FearedBuck) July 13, 2023
As a stockholder in rumble I cannot express to you enough my disappointment of having the quartering signed a deal with you and in addition giving him the Rumble logo in his Twitter bio, I’m reconsidering my investment and your company 10,000 shares
— Floridabreeze🌴 (@FloridaBreezeFL) July 13, 2023
This is wild what happened to friendly competition it’s disappointing to see creators taking part in illegal action by over sending sending traffic to the platform.
It’s nice to to see that Rumble won’t take this lying down.
— Justin (@laststop08) July 13, 2023
W Chris holding it down for RUMBLE🔥🙏🫶
— oxvibeskiii (@F1LTHYFLEET) July 13, 2023
Rumble has gone on to become one of the most popular livestreaming platforms, having signed notable figures such as Kai Cenat, Darren “IShowSpeed,”Matthew “Mizkif,”and Steven “Destiny.”According to StreamsCharts, Russel Brand, Andrew Tate, and Bryan “RiceGum” are the most-watched content creators on Rumble.
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