Her blogging friends are possibly freaked out as well due to the live-streaming issue.
I do want to make a statement here that I love Disney Vloggers. That's how I found BLAB in the first place, on Adam's recommendation. I subscribe to at least 12 different accounts, so for anyone to say that I'm against Disney Vlogging is false. There is a way to film in the parks and not be intrusive, KT has no awareness of her current surroundings nor does she pay attention as to who or what she's filming as she walks aimlessly, that's why people react the way they do to her.
Anyone who goes to Disney can live stream on any platform. Anyone also has the ability to turn off Super Chats or any other format's donation platform prior to filming. It has gone from sharing with people what it's like to be in the parks on any given day (crowd levels, construction progress, etc.) to people now realizing that they can get money donated while they do it, which is what's become the problematic issue. If someone sees that they can essentially fund their trip just by going "live" creates a massive amount of copycat streamers on TikTok, twitch, etc. That's what we are dealing with currently in the parks, both in California and Florida.
If someone wants to stream in the queue, they should only be able to film their face as the main focus. When filming on attractions, streamers should only film the ride POV and avoid showing others outside of your group as much as possible. I know there's a lot of hate toward Tim Tracker, but he is an example of how to respectfully film your trips to the parks, same goes for Justin, OA, Magic Journeys, etc. There is no way to keep other people out of what you're filming, but they don't linger and they at least try to avoid getting people in their shots when possible.
Vlogging is great free advertising for Disney, I understand why they allow it and why it's hard to control. The monetizing while filming live streams on property is the issue that needs to be restructured.
People or Vloggers that film, edit, and post later have the right and ability to do so and monetize it as long as Disney does not feel they are infringing on Disney's Intellectual Property.