Culture Valve cooperates in banning Steam mod for depicting “historical revisionism - Rare instance of Steam bowing to pressure to remove content

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South Korea’s Game Rating and Administration Committee (GRAC) says Valve agreed to cooperate in taking down a mod that “distorted historical facts” related to the Gwangju Uprising, a pivotal event in the country’s history (as reported by ThisIsGame).

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The mod in question is a fan-made total conversion mod of the hit strategy RPG Mount & Blade: Warband, originally uploaded to the game’s Steam Workshop page. Titled “Gwangju Running Man,” the mod transformed Mount & Blade: Warband’s medieval setting into a modern depiction of Korea’s Gwangju Democratization Movement.

The Gwangju Uprising was a series of student-led pro-democratic demonstrations that took place in Korea in 1980. These protests are known to have been violently suppressed by the military, resulting in a massacre of civilians, but the mod depicted protesters as armed and violent criminals (according to YNA), thus framing the military regime’s brutality as justified. Additionally, the mod brandished the image of military dictator Chun Doo Hwan as its cover.

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South Korean press speculates that the uploader may have been Chinese, based on reviews by the account being written in Simplified Chinese. However, users online argue that these may be a “cover,” as denial of the Gwangju massacre is more likely to come from Korea’s own far right groups than from abroad. In response to reports, GRAC initially had the Mount & Blade: Warband mod blocked in South Korea, but subsequently teamed up with the Korean government to ask Valve to have the mod suspended worldwide.

Valve complied, and the Gwangju Running Man mod was deleted from Steam as of June 12. Valve commented that it recognizes the importance the historical event has for Korean people. This is a somewhat rare instance of the platform taking acting upon local political and historical sensitivities.

Author: Amber V from Automaton Media

Note: reported originally from an article in Korean Here

Original Archive
 
They don't want the storefront blocked or banned in the country. They've actually said this regarding some other things and other countries.

South Korea also likes to do things that makes it harder for foreign companies to do business in Korea. One example is Twitch being charged much more for bandwidth to the point that they capped streams at 720p for Korean streamers, and Twitch Korea eventually shut down a few years later because it was too expensive to run. Another example is how Google Maps does not have complete map data for South Korea, as the said map data is withheld for use exclusively with Korean companies like NAVER and it's maps feature.
 
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I generally hate censorship, but I can sympathize with Valve. Losing the entirety of the S. Korean market over a stupid mod nobody plays is foolish, but its also how censorship becomes the norm. Slowly in increments.

South Korea also likes to do things that makes it harder for foreign countries to do business in Korea. One example is Twitch being charged much more for bandwidth to the point that they capped streams at 720p for Korean streamers, and Twitch Korea eventually shut down a few years later because it was too expensive to run. Another example is how Google Maps does not have complete map data for South Korea, as the said map data is withheld for use exclusively with Korean companies like NAVER and it's maps feature.

The entirety of the Korean economy is geared towards propping up huge corporations to compete on the global market. Endless privileges and basically infinite as much resources as the state can provide. Samsung is 20% of their GDP by itself.
 
They can block the infringing content from overly sensitive countries. Germans cant buy stuff with nationalist socialist imagery, that doesnt stop my freedom dollars from buying wolfestein.
This is a first time Valve goes that far
They originally just blocked it in Korea but then the government got together with other gay countries to get it removed entirely.
 
Unless valve removes the coffin of andy and ley ley I'm not convinced this is a big enough issue.
 
did they ban it world wide or just for korea?
 
Unpopular opinion, but if Valve rely so heavily on Korean revenue, then Korea relies heavily on Steam for revenue/entertainment/bread and circuses.

Korea would come back to the negotiating table if millions of their civilians couldn't get a break from their 16 hour, 7 days a week work shifts.

More companies need to have bigger balls and say "suck it". It's not like Valve/Steam has competitors.
 
>The Gwangju Uprising was a series of student-led pro-democratic demonstrations that took place in Korea in 1980. These protests are known to have been violently suppressed by the military, resulting in a massacre of civilians
So communists funded by the Soviets and CCP?
Yes, but them being put down was so harsh that that whole region of the country gives their version of Democrats something like an 80 to 90 percent win margin to this very day. To be honest, they tilt the scales so hard that you pretty much, in a balanced electorate, expect the rightwing party to win everywhere but there in an even election.
 
Bad slippery slope Valve got themselves into…
Not really. They're not an America-only company and the idea of respecting legal requests from individual countries is that stories like this will show up in the press and you're respecting their government/society - if people in actual South Korea find this to be a bad action, they should change their country and not try to change the world.

If you don't like this idea then you're (kind of - I don't want to put words in your mouth) either for Team America World Police or the Facebook/Google system where there's no legal basis for a lot of stuff and you're just leaving decisions to a giant megacorp that silently does this shit without legal requests. Facebook/Google will not stand up for you when a DMCA request comes and they will remove stuff just based on very opaque government relationships.

I would have at least hoped Valve would make it a South Korea only ban of the mod but its so tiny I doubt it'll make a difference.
 
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