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This idea would be nice, but it runs antithetical to the whole point of vtubers.
In many ways, modern online influencers occupy the same parasocial niche as the Japanese idols of years past do. Most independent creators monetize these relationships in some way, but without the high-control corporate structures that defined the idol industry. Belle Delphine can auction off her bath water, and Dream can merchandise his baby photos, all without some balding producer getting a cut of the profits. In the 21st century, no longer are production companies and record labels the kingmakers that they used to be, now anyone can toss a cover onto Youtube and let the algorithm decide their fate.
The success of corporate vtubing, and the reason that companies like Sony are so eager to get into the fold, is a response to the growing independence of content creation. Media companies easserting their control in the age of streaming. The vtuber is a composite product built from both an actor’s performance and a virtual avatar. And since the avatar is a work of art that can be made the property of a corporation - it forcibly shackles the performers to the corporation. The creation of a corporate vtuber is akin to the creation of a whole new person, one that the company owns. The company retains the rights to the avatar, character, backstory, all related media and conceptual works, and does not need the consent of the actor or pay royalties when slapping their character’s face on a lunchbox.
Letting go of a vtuber avatar is something that you can't do, because ultimately vtuber companies aren't financed through revenue sharing with their talents, like a traditional talent agency, but instead, through the total ownership and control of their virtual influencers. If Holo or Niji surrender that control, even slightly, then the whole business model comes crumbling down. Even when they have nothing do lose, and giving them up would be a purely positive gesture. Think of HoloCN, or Niji's various branch closures. Why didn't they just release the models and rights to the characters and let them go indie? Because it sets a bad corporate precedent. The instability and surrender of total control incurred isn't worth the significant goodwill gained.