100% certain this is not a compliment and I doubt any serious organization would ever want to be associated with this image anyway.
...which was my point.
EVO publicly announcing prior to their event, rather than simply staying silent until immediately before the event like MLG, unleashed a horde of angry people who wanted change.
EVO didn't announce anything with Nintendo in mind, they announced it with the players in mind. I'd imagine they announced it for the players more than they even announced it for EVO. For MLG, it was MLG first. For EVO it was players first.
That is a good thing for the Smash community, and a response that is likeable by us.
This literally happened before for Brawl, except MLG knew about it much farther in advance, attempted to get permission, and didn't tell people until immediately before (like RIGHT before the event; people at the event were asking if their matches were going to be streamed). They acted professionally and in MLG's best interests.
To those of you who haven't entered "the real world" yet, a company is responsible for the repercussions of their actions. Playing dumb doesn't work at that level.
"Oh I didn't know there would be an angry mob" doesn't really fly. EVO was very polite in their announcement, both to Nintendo and the players, but their timing was not made with Nintendo in mind and anyone and everyone knows that the situation was going to turn into a whirlwind. The same community literally campaigned to raise tens of thousands of dollars to get a spot in EVO.
Now imagine you are
any other company. Capcom, Namco, whoever.
If you were sending bad news to EVO, such as "no streaming allowed" or "we will not allow matches to be recorded in any way" or "we require you to pay $X in a licensing fee" or some other negative thing, you would now know that EVO is not against simply telling their fans.
Despite what you may think, this is incredibly rare. It is a good mark on EVO that they were willing to not only say "what gives" to Nintendo out loud, but to do so early and
on our community's website directly. There wasn't a silent restructuring of the stream, no "we'll keep trying to convince Nintendo and tell them at the last minute if they don't budge", nothing like that.
The fact of the matter is that EVO can't be directly linked to being "the mouthpiece of an angry mob" and we both know it.
They literally are. You can't not see that. It
just happened.
"Hey guys, NIntendo says we can't stream. Please don't try to sneak a stream. We're all disappointed about this."
angry mob appears
That's all it took.
Additionally, if you were the head of EVO, you would be forced to explain to the Melee community why there couldn't be a stream because you would want to maintain ties with the Smash community as well as your customer base.
Or what?
Seriously, or what?
You think if EVO came and EVO just announced day of at the venue "Sorry, cease and desist from Nintendo, can't stream" instead of announcing it on their main page several days before the event that people would just leave or not go back to EVO?
The fact that tons of people interpreted this information and began to hit Nintendo's customer service wasn't because EVO planned for people to react that way, it's because communities and individuals were genuinely upset about the predicament at hand. *facepalm*
Which they knew about
because they were told days in advance.
I can't emphasize this enough. Being given a cease and desist letter by Nintendo and then publicly announcing it on your website and then directly to the community immediately after is not a common move.