🐱 Why I deleted my Steam account

CatParty
http://www.gamesindustry.biz/articles/2017-09-14-why-i-deleted-my-steam-account
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Valve's dominance in the PC gaming space is made more harmful by its tolerance for toxic users


Earlier this week I wrote about a recurring problem in games, and what I was going to do as a member of the media to try and fix it. Today I'm going to talk about something I'm doing to fix it as a customer and gamer.

I hadn't intended to write a follow-up piece, but I hit a bit of a breaking point this week with the one-two punch of PewDiePie dropping the n-word on stream and Bungie removing a white supremacist symbol from its Destiny 2.

Both events are part of a wretched pattern that has been recurring in games for several years now, a pattern where we see some deep-seated prejudices in gaming culture come to the fore in alarming clarity for a moment, everyone points and decries the awfulness, then everyone else gets angry at the people who didn't like the awful thing. If we're very lucky, the people who screwed up in the first place publicly apologize, reflect on their mistakes and try to do better the next time. It's much, much rarer to see anyone indirectly responsible for this pattern take an honest look at their role in it, and we absolutely need them to if this is ever going to get better.

People talk about racism, sexism, transphobia and the like as if they are diseases, like it's something binary you either have or you don't. "This is racist. That is not racist." But maybe we should think of these things less like contagions and more like environmental pollutants. They surround us at all times, but in varying concentrations. They're like arsenic in your drinking water, or rat feces in your popcorn; we should aspire to have none at all, but that's a difficult enough task that we "accept" both in small quantities. (Seriously.) When they are present in very small amounts, the damage they do is manageable. But when the concentration is high enough, they can be fatal.

This is a cultural problem, which means all of us play a small role in making it better or worse. Like riding a bike instead of driving a car or using LEDs instead of incandescent lights, our actions don't move the needle on their own, but can add up to something significant when combined with the actions of enough others. This week's events left me wanting to do something to make things better, and that's when I saw a NSFW tweet with some screen caps of the Firewatch Steam forum.

After PewDiePie dropped his racist interjection, Firewatch developer Campo Santo had the popular streamer's video of the game pulled from YouTube using the service's copyright claims process. Angry gamers then began review bombing the title on Steam, and poured into the game-specific forums to flood them with abuse. Because that's how it's done now. Because we are gamers and every avenue of feedback available to us must be weaponized so that we can have things our way. Because we're so upset about a developer using a questionable invocation of the DMCA that we would crusade arm-in-arm with overt racists and human garbage rather than let our rage go unvented for even a moment. (See also: People actually concerned with ethics in games journalism who provided willing cover for virulent misogynists and harassers during GamerGate.)

Most of those threads in the Firewatch forum have since been consolidated, with the most exceptionally racist ones being deleted. But it wasn't Valve who handled the clean up, because Valve offloads moderation of game-specific forums to the developers. Just like translation of its store pages or curation of its catalog, Valve seems to like nothing more to offload the work on others. That approach might be fine for some functions, but the company cannot abdicate responsibility for the community and culture that has come from its own neglect.

That's why I'm terminating my Steam account.

For as much as Valve's actions have revitalized the PC gaming scene in the last dozen years, its inaction has been steadily deteriorating gaming culture. Our own Rob Fahey has covered Steam's community woes before, but the company's dogmatic commitment to removing human judgment from every aspect of the operation is in effect a judgment call of its own, one that presumes everything is acceptable and there are no limits other than legal ones. And on the rare occasion Valve actually deviates from that approach and enforces some standards, it does so reluctantly.

Right now you can find Hatred, Playing History 2 - Slave Trade, and House Party on the storefront, showing that Valve has no problem with the glorification of mass shootings, the trivialization of atrocities, or the gamification of rape. We can give them some points for consistency though, as the availability of Paranautical Activity suggests Valve is unwilling to take a stand even against death threats to its own founder.

This same approach of course applies to the Steam community, which technically has guidelines, but little interest in enforcing them. Hey, there's a guideline forbidding racism and discrimination, weird. I guess "Nazi Recruitment Group Order#1" (NSFW) with the swastika logo and 76 members has just fallen through the cracks for the last two years. And that user, "F*** Blacks," with a graphic avatar of a man fellating himself? I'm sure he just changed it and I just happened to visit the site in the split-second that was online before he was banned.

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Nope, still there.

Oh, and this one, "Whites Only," (NSFW) a group "for any fellow White Supremacists, Neo-Nazis, and anyone who just hates colored people!" (If you must click through, be warned it only gets more racist from there.) Maybe nobody's noticed them. Oh wait, no, here's a post in the Steam help forums asking people to help ban the group for being racist. Well maybe Valve hasn't seen it. Oh, wait. There's a post from a Valve community mod locking the thread and linking to the support page on how to report abusive behavior.

That's one of 29 community mods volunteering their time "to help keep discussions clean and on topic, and remove reported user generated content around the Steam Community." If you talk about actual Valve employees, people who might theoretically be trained and compensated to do the job, there are apparently only 12 that mod the community. Even they aren't necessarily focused on the task; they include programmers, software engineers, and UI designers that the company simply says "spend some time" helping out on the forums.

By the way, Steam had 12.9 million users online at the same time today. Steam is a massive chunk of the gaming community and Valve has offloaded moderation responsibilities to the developers and the users to a staggering degree. The company is so dedicated to having other people fix its problems that when I filed my request to terminate the account because I was sick of the toxicity, the first response I got from Steam Support said, "Please make sure you're using the 'Report Violation' feature to report inappropriate behavior or users on Steam."

Whatever its motives, Valve is clearly just fine operating an online toilet that harbors the worst dregs of society. But if it isn't willing to staff up a reasonable amount of dedicated community management people, enforce even the minimal guidelines it claims to have, and excise these bad faith actors from its community, then I have no choice but to believe Valve wants them there. And if Valve wants them there, it's fair to hold the company responsible for all the vileness they spew from the platform it owns and completely controls. Whatever benefit Steam once offered me has been more than offset by the harm it causes to its marginalized users, gaming culture, and society as a whole. I won't be a part of that community any longer.

So my Steam account is gone, or presumably will be once Steam Support gets around to fulfilling my request. While I would encourage everyone reading this to consider whether Steam is a community they want to associate themselves with, I have to acknowledge this is not a huge sacrifice for me. I'm losing access to dozens of games and a backlog of purchased-but-unplayed titles, but I'm not primarily a PC gamer.

Having acknowledged that, it would seem unreasonable that my "call to action" be for everyone to delete their Steam accounts, or for developers to pull their games from a store that provides an overwhelming majority of their business. Instead, I would simply ask that everyone do what they can to foster viable alternatives. As consumers, we can stop buying new games from Steam if they are available on GOG.com, itch.io, or an alternative storefront. Developers, make it a priority to get your games on as many storefronts as possible, even if they only incrementally boost the bottom line. Because right now the PC gaming industry is entirely too dependent on a company with entirely too little interest in basic human decency, and it's hurting us all.

 
Next up, BuzzFeed and Huffpost will tell us all about how white supremacists are utilizing Steam to recruit and spread fascism.

That "group" he cited was literally a troll group with no activity since 2015 and three posts ever. In all time.

The only reason it was still there was nobody had even noticed it.

It took the most triggered pussy who ever cut his own balls off to find it.

He really had to go out of his way to find something to be triggered by.
 
That "group" he cited was literally a troll group with no activity since 2015 and three posts ever. In all time.

The only reason it was still there was nobody had even noticed it.

It took the most triggered pussy who ever cut his own balls off to find it.

He really had to go out of his way to find something to be triggered by.
Thinkpieces don't write themselves. Besides, he's still a more legitimate journalist than Brianna Wu.
 
I always get a chuckle out of these.

I didn't know what Gamergate was until after 2016 when I joined Kiwi Farms. You could use the internet every day of your life and still miss even the larger "scandals in the gaming industry." This doesn't even register. If it increased the amount of swastikas and hate groups on the internet, no one on Earth would have been able to tell. I can't go to the grocery store without seeing swastikas some edgy kids drew on merchandise.

How do people get it in their heads that anyone, anywhere, cares? If it weren't for @Jaimas I still wouldn't be sure which side was Gamergate and which was Gamerghazi. Maybe I'm just a normie. I don't know.
 
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I'm sure Valve is suffering great financial loses now that this guy deleted his account.

Can't believe he actually wrote defending free speech is bad because there's Nazis that defend that.
Just :story:
Should we ban environmental protection laws because Hitler was one of the first to enact one?

Give it a little while.
 
I thought this was going to be about something that matters regarding steam, not about a youtuber saying a word and a meme symbol being removed by Bungie causing a manchild to have a meltdown.
A youtuber saying a word and a meme symbol being removed by Bungie would count as something that matters to someone who thinks a manchild having an Xbox Live moment and a coincidental image is evidence is good reason to close some gaming account. In the end, all this guy did was throw away whatever amount of money he spent on video games that aren't coming back along with making an article we kiwi's can laugh at.

How do people get it in their heads that anyone, anywhere, cares? If it weren't for @Jaimas I still wouldn't be sure when side was Gamergate and which was Gamerghazi. Maybe I'm just a normie. I don't know.
Gate or Ghazi, it's autistic screeching over vidya games. Steam is more or less a place where you could have some legit neo-nazi use it and a place where people make edgy shitpost.
 
Every single one of these articles and screeds and puff pieces are all the exact same story: "I don't like Trump."

We get it. We get it, you guys. You don't like Trump and nazis. You're boycotting X and Y and Z because nazis. Everything you don't like must be opposed because fascism. We fucking get it.
 
Every single one of these articles and screeds and puff pieces are all the exact same story: "I don't like Trump."

We get it. We get it, you guys. You don't like Trump and nazis. You're boycotting X and Y and Z because nazis. Everything you don't like must be opposed because fascism. We fucking get it.

It's nothing more than a mantra at this point. These people must think that the more they write/speak about how much they hate Trump/Alt-Right/Republicans/Pick a group, the more likely it will be that they'll hit a critical mass and get Hillary Clinton into the White House.
 
Both events are part of a wretched pattern that has been recurring in games for several years now, a pattern where we see some deep-seated prejudices in gaming culture come to the fore in alarming clarity for a moment, everyone points and decries the awfulness, then everyone else gets angry at the people who didn't like the awful thing. If we're very lucky, the people who screwed up in the first place publicly apologize, reflect on their mistakes and try to do better the next time. It's much, much rarer to see anyone indirectly responsible for this pattern take an honest look at their role in it, and we absolutely need them to if this is ever going to get better.

Yes, what a "wretched pattern" it is (really, wretched? Lightning and the lightning-bug, man) when people are alerted to a problem and respond to it with an apology and honest self-reflection. What they need to do more of is chastise themselves publicly and announce the collective guilt of themselves and all their co-workers.

Here's a clue for all future gaming writers who want to know why companies don't self-flagellate to what you consider the appropriate degree: No company's legal department will ever in a thousand years let them talk about how all white people are racist on Twitter or how their company has been bad at removing racially biased content. The moment they do, someone will get the idea to start a class-action employment lawsuit and the company's going to be on the hook for a big settlement, will have everyone's emails combed through for evidence of bias, and so on.

No one wants to deal with that, so no company will ever give you what you want. Blame capitalism, while you're being paid for "journalism" about entertainment media that involves playing AAA games on consoles sent to you by marketing departments.
 
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