Heard of digital beggars? When a UPI code turns into a livestream tip jar
₹4,500 crore in 2025, a startling subculture of ‘digital beggars’ has emerged. These are not street performers or skilled influencers but ordinary individuals who go live on YouTube, Instagram, or Facebook for hours, sitting in drab rooms with a QR code plastered on screen, waiting for UPI notifications like "Received ₹10 on Paytm".No dances, no skits, no aesthetic backdrops—just raw pleas for micro-donations from thousands of viewers.
Pleas that bring in instant money, and at times throw up the risk of donors' vulnerability to cyber crime.This ‘digital beggar’ phenomenon has snowballed, turning "buy me a coffee" tip jars into a full-blown passive income model exploiting UPI's frictionless payments. Govind Lodha, popularly known as Govind Surya, a Madhya Pradesh-based YouTuber who has been creating content for 12 years, is known to be one of the first ones to start this trend in 2025.Lodha, previously scraping by with odd jobs like delivery and gardening that earned him just ₹300-400 a day, experimented with lifestyle and music content on YouTube without much traction.
His breakthrough came from an uncanny resemblance to Indian cricketer Suryakumar Yadav, drawing half a million subscribers to his account govindsurya360, boosted by comments from the cricketer himself on his videos two years back.Six months ago, during a live stream while riding back home on a two-wheeler, when Lodha ran out of fuel, viewers suggested sharing his QR code, sparking the idea of UPI donations for shoutouts."Usually, a younger audience who likes the validation of getting a shoutout from YouTubers like me with half-a-million subscribers, send money through YouTube’s super chat. However, a majority of my audience comes from tier-2, -3 region and
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