Chat quality is a revenue metric. Viewers gift in rooms that feel alive and safe; they leave rooms where the first visible message is a scam link. Moderation is therefore not a compliance chore — it is conversion optimization for your most engaged surface.
Layer 1: automatic filters
Word lists are the cheapest layer and should carry most of the volume. Maintain four separate lists — slurs and harassment, scam and phishing patterns, contact-information fishing, and competitor spam — because their false-positive tolerances differ. Review the catch log weekly: a filter nobody audits quietly rots.
Layer 2: humans with defined jobs
- One active moderator per ~1,000 concurrent viewers as a floor.
- Give moderators role presets, not admin-everything: mute and delete are routine; blocking is a decision.
- Use shadow actions (silent mute/limit) for borderline cases — public punishment invites drama that costs more than the offense.
- Every action leaves an audit log entry. Disputes end in the log, not in memory.
Layer 3: escalation rules
Escalation is what separates a playbook from a mood. Define in advance what triggers a chat slowdown, what triggers gift-only mode, and what ends a session. When a raid hits at 2 a.m., the moderator on duty should be executing a written procedure, not improvising policy.
If the rule isn't written down before the incident, it isn't a rule — it's an argument waiting to happen.
Our Live Moderation Suite packages these layers — synced word lists, role presets, shadow actions and audit logs — into one console that a small team can actually run. But the structure above is tool-agnostic: adopt it with whatever you have today.