Face pixelation in TV shows or videos is manually realized and not well studied to date. As the prevailing of online video streaming, we develop a new tool called face pixelation in live-streaming (FPLV) to generate automatic personal privacy filtering during unconstrained streaming. FPLV is organized in a frame-to-video structure for fast and accurate face pixelation of irrelevant people. Leveraging image-based face detection and recognition networks on individual frames, we propose a positioned incremental affinity propagation (PIAP) clustering algorithm to associate faces across frames. Through deep feature and position aggregated affinities, PIAP handles the cluster number generation, new cluster discovering, and faces' raw trajectories forming simultaneously.