What a silly take.
Ignoring the issue, or not even being aware of it, does not mean that people don't want to fix the problem.
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What a silly take.
Ignoring the issue, or not even being aware of it, does not mean that people don't want to fix the problem.
Not wanting to fix a problem includes not caring if it's fixed or not.
In my opinion, where this “movement” failed was in the messaging.
“Stop Killing Games” is a great slogan written by a young person without much experience.
No company or government will pass a law that says, “you must indefinitely support every game you ever release”. Now, I understand that this isn’t what the group was calling for, but this is the message that comes across. Because of that, it immediately loses support from anyone in any type of software industry and likely many other industries as we know it isn’t realistic.
The movement is two months in to a year-long campaign, and that's just the EU. Ross Scott's also likely pushing 40, if I had to guess. The clearest messaging of what they're asking for is to prevent remote disabling of games, which is right in the petition.
Percentage wise, I'm sure support is very high. But for a petition like this, I'd be shocked if even 0.01% percent of people have even heard of it.
Personally, I support the petition (obviously) and wish it could have succeeded. But even I think that in the grand scheme of all the problems in the world, this is very far down my wishlist.
That said, it's very close to other, higher-ticket items. For example:
A mechanism for transitioning a service to user/community support when a company is no longer commercially interested is a common issue across sectors.
It’s pretty clear that democratically speaking, we do not object to companies arbitrarily removing access to purchased video games. Only a minority objects to it.
It's more like "people don't know about the issue, or how it affects them, as they're busier with their everyday lives". This happens a fair bit.
Additionally, the graph shows that the movement had huge fervour at the start but then lost steam. So:
EDIT: can someone convince PewDiePie to at least talk about the campaign?
Well I can't do anything because it's EU only. I did do the France thing in the beginning which any person could do, but this is a situation for those outside of the EU only being able to watch.
It’s sad, but I think the only way to preserve video games is through piracy and emulation. The companies do not care, states do not care, and most people do not care until it’s too late (and the games are seen as consumables by most people, which imo explains why they are « happy » to buy the same games again and again).
If California can pass their law about what counts as "buying" a digital good, then I hope we can take that as motivation here in the US to try for similar. I wrote my representative about it (she's an R, so she didn't care), and I'll see who I can write at the state level.
It'll become a partisan thing and then the Republicans will start killing more games just to make libs sad.
You're being ridiculous. It's not a far strech to think that most people would believe that a company shouldn't be able to take back something you bought from them. This has implications with digital content in general.
The issue is that you're looking at group that shrinks at every step.
How many people own digital copies of things? How many of them have been through a situation where a company removes their access to that digital copy? How many of them actually noticed? How many of them had that experience with a videogame? How many of them got upset enough that it stuck with them rather than moving on? How many of them even know this movement exists?
If you get the word out, and frame it as the first step in a fight for improved digital ownership rights for all digital media, you increase your base of potential joiners.
The biggest thing is that you need to get the word out even further about it. I'm subscribed to a ton of gaming youtube channels and the only coverage of this that I've seen is from Ross and one other channel. Get bigger youtube names in on this.
Reach out to individual indie developers to ask them to sign a charter to support the movement and spread the word. Run a game jam on itch.io to start making it cool to support it and spread the word. For very small devs that are just putting the game files for single player games out there with no drm applied, it's literally free to throw in behind this and could be free extra marketing for both parties.
Without a counter movement, or some way for people to register that you are against this movement, you have incomplete info and cannot assume that people not supporting this are actively against it.
It would be just as foolish to say that everyone supports it because 361,826 of 361,826 who spoke up said that they support it, right?
Movements like this live and die on awareness.
This has implications with digital content in general
Not even just digital content. This is only half a step removed from right to repair campaigns, and that’s all about physical hardware, ranging from mobile phones to tractors on farms.
That's a bit doomerist of you. Why leap to the assumption that voters are against it rather than the far simpler explanation that people are unaware of its existence, or don't feel they understand it well enough to have an opinion?
In which case what's needed is a much stronger social media effort, preferably headed up by the organisers themselves, or someone else who can make it their entire thing, from where it can hopefully radiate out to other interested parties.
Y’all have to push and campaign for this.
Or maybe the vast majority don't even know this campaign exists