Streaming site Twitch is taking a hard line against users whose feeds include "sexually suggestive" outfits, according to the rules of conduct changes that posted Monday. "Nerds are sexy, and you're all magnificent, beautiful creatures, but let's try and keep this about the games, shall we?" reads the update.

Twitch states that gamers who stream themselves in no clothing, or sexually suggestive clothing including but not limited to underwear, lingerie, swimsuits, or pasties "will most likely get… suspended." Since the policy was implemented, Twitch has already banned one performer, according to Gamerheadlines: Rooster Teeth representative Meg Turney, who is "known for her high quality cosplay and saucy lingerie photos alongside excellent journalism for Rooster Teeth’s news show ‘The Know.’"

Twitch clarifies that even players who try to claim skimpy outfits or shirtlessness is due to the weather will still get banned. "If it's unbearably hot where you are, and you happen to have your shirt off (gents) or a bikini top (ladies), then just crop the webcam to your face," the company wrote. "If your lighting is hot, get fluorescent bulbs to reduce the heat. Xbox One Kinect doesn't zoom? Move it closer to you, or turn it off. There is always a workaround."

The policy tracks with the one used for the streamed games themselves—content where nudity is a "core focus" is not allowed, and "modded nudity is disallowed in its entirety." Nudity has been a problem about as long as gamers have had cameras attached to their gaming apparati. In 2006, our then-gaming editor Ben Kuchera declared that the "time-to-butt ratio" for the Xbox Live Vision camera was "insane," while both the PlayStation 4 and Xbox One launches had incidents of profanity and nudity with the bundled cameras and available apps.

Update: Meg Turney clarified on her Twitter feed that her account was not suspended, but rather she was "asked to change her picture."