Fully agree with
@PMKFRUITPRO on this one... it stinks to high heaven. For a number to be legitimately that big, he'd need to be holding a decent stake of er... stake, or revshare against literally billions of dollars of losses.
More plausible, remembering that he has frequently stated what he has "won" or "lost" on equal footing with actual affiliate payments - that $360m could quite easily be affiliate payments + monopoly money credits for playing with. So that's the amount he has "received" (and grabs the attention of less reputable streamers willing to sell their soul), but the actual amount he has received would then be significantly lower (but still many millions) - and much less likely to be disclosed.
Similarly with the $70m+ "given away" - I can imagine most of that is bonus funds with wagering requirements or similar that has little to no cash value - with a few genuine amounts thrown in for clickbait ("A gives B $100k for C" type headlines you've seen from time to time) to attract new viewers. Easy soundbite to make when the money isn't coming out the other side - much like the soundbites from the WH "Strike Gold" (£10.5m btw) or VS "Weekend Booster" promotions.
So as long as it's sites that are "regulated" people can still stream? That's what I got from it anyway, Is there anything new since?
Pretty much, most of the "twitch banned gambling" crowd were streamers moaning that
they were getting restricted and spreading misinformation for further clickbait and drama-farming. The casino/slots category expanded significantly when the monopoly money crowd jumped on board, and similarly the category has contracted significantly when they were booted off - just like it did when illegal and/or rigged CSGO skin gambling websites popped up a few years prior.
If things settle down, Twitch may not need to add any more rules for the time being - they will need to keep monitoring though to continue banning the viewbot channels and people trying to edge the rules - one example trying to conform with the rules by displaying the casino licence number on-stream, alas "JAZ" is the wrong answer.
I do expect Twitch will need to clamp down on inactive streams promoting a far-right streaming platform though - that's some PR they really don't want!