Sujet : Re: Just Another Necessary Reminder That Valve Promotes Underage Gambling
De : Xocyll (at) *nospam* gmx.com (Xocyll)
Groupes : comp.sys.ibm.pc.games.actionDate : 30. Dec 2024, 06:24:01
Autres entêtes
Organisation : A noiseless patient Spider
Message-ID : <d1b4nj12cdj0esm1ibtacrrk90j3q9cr7r@4ax.com>
References : 1
User-Agent : Forte Agent 2.0/32.640
Spalls Hurgenson <
spallshurgenson@gmail.com> looked up from reading the
entrails of the porn spammer to utter "The Augury is good, the signs
say:
>
While it's great fun to point fingers at Epic, or Microsoft, at EA or
Activision for their scummy, quasi-legal behaviors, let's not also
forget that the darling of the PC Gaming industry, Valve, is neck-deep
in supporting not only gambling, but underage gambling.
>
A huge chunk of Valve's income derives from selling lootbox items used
as 'tokens' by gambling websites, and the company turns a blind eye to
the practice even as it rakes in billions. Its uses psychologically
manipulative practices to ensnare its victims, and uses the same shady
tactics as other gambling companies to find loopholes that keep it
(just barely) on the right side of the law (and sometimes not even
then).
If they sell "lootbox" items used as "tokens" on gambling sites, isn't
it the gambling sites responsibility to not have underaged people on
their sites?
If they can't use the tokens, the underaged won't buy them.
If some bar does a weird promotion, like bring in a rose, get a free
beer, you gonna blame the florist for an underaged kid buying a rose and
trading it for beer?
Not illegal to buy a rose, or sell one, the bar is committing the
illegal act by trading a kid a beer for that rose.
Assign the blame where it belongs, with the gambling sites that are not
keeping underaged gamblers off their sites.
Xocyll