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翻訳の問題を報告
This is huge, because arbitration exists so that big corpos can dump any small scale case into the dumpster and ignore it,
This is also one of the only times i have seen a TOS change tell you exactly what changed rather than just say “accepted the updated TOS pls”.
They handled this well and boosted your rights and people still complain.
Yup, most of the people who are complaining either didn’t read/understand the update or are part of the crowd that intentionally spreads misinformation in an attempt to stir up drama/ anti steam sentiments
The only recorded case of an account getting fully locked/banned, and its game access removed, was from a guy who basically spent years harassing and threatening people, Steam support staff included.
Arbitration is done at the company's expense so every time an arbitration case comes up they have to spend money to look at it address it and send it away, and then the lawyer comes back next month with another submission...and so on and so on.
So the change is that arbitration is now OPTIONAL. Il.e weither Valve or the consumer can decline arbitration and go straight to court. Neither side is forced/obligated to go through arbitration.
The thing is filning in court is done at the plantiff's expense intially.
If the plantiff wins then then reimbursement for the legal fees is generally part and parcel of the awards.
And yeah you can kinda tell this was likely the first time many people ever actually read the SSA. It's also quite cute how thiey think 'I'mma go to GoG' When GoG's ToS have never substantially differed from STeams.
You're not going to lose your games.
give it time after gabe dies and microsoft buys steam.
Why is it that people assume and presume it is only Valve?
https://www.blizzard.com/en-us/legal/fba4d00f-c7e4-4883-b8b9-1b4500a402ea/blizzard-end-user-license-agreement
btw most of the tos and ula will be dumped in the future so you dont need to worry about this. its an issue with the ip law and things will get bad enough thanks to crap like pocket pair and nintendo that there will be forced updates to existing law and it will either cause another round of update or kill of quite alot of industries not just gaming.
...
I still have plenty of old game manuals from the '90s here.
All of them have EULAs either printed on the back page of the manual, or as a separate inlay sheet which fit a one or two A6 sheets. Most not even in actual small print; just regular print.
What those old EULAs boil down to is that you're only buying a single copy of the game and the right to use it; not the game itself - i.e. the entire IP. And that said copy is only for personal use, and you're not allowed to exploit it commercially. Many don't even bar reselling said copy. In fact, some explicitly make mention that you do have that right.
And that's really all of it, for most of them.
The original Starcraft EULA, for instance, doesn't even bother to contain any legalese indicating its online components are sold as a service that would allow for Blizzard to discontinue it.
We have to deal with these EULAs now for one simple reason:
in the old days publishers didn't bother bolting everything down, because they didn't have any effective means to enforce it. If they'd wanted to enforce it, they'd have to go through courts where much of the legalese wouldn't hold up - and worse: would've created precedent that it shouldn't hold up.
But now, with digital distribution and DRM, publishers can enforce it. All the power is in their hands. And it's the consumer which has to go to court to correct any maltreatment after the fact. In effect - EULAs are largely scare tactic used to dissuade consumers from trying to exercise their rights.
The other thing that changed between then and now, is that gaming used to be a niche industry. Whereas it's out-grossing Hollywood nowadays. And that shift in revenue has brought with it, all the profit-maximizing sleazebags as well.
The rest seems to not really have any relation to the thread since many consider this change a more pro-consumer method of dispute resolving, although now it's likely going to cost money likely thanks to frivolous parties compared to arbitership as they were willing to waive off an initial amount, whereas going to court they most likely wont as the expenses would already be higher. Thank time wasting parties with ill-intent for that.