Saw a article on a large number of gamers being over 55 and then I saw this which I believe needs to be addressed in our current laws.

  • kernelle@lemmy.world
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    5 months ago

    You seem to be missing my point, it is very clear what Valve thinks about this. It’s literally the article above? And I get their point, but I’m arguing they don’t have a legal leg to stand on.

    In the EU there is legal precedent to give access to every account of a deceased person to their next of kin. T&C doesn’t mean shit when it goes against consumer protection or civil laws.

    When the T&C say you have to give your kidney to Gabe Newell it won’t hold up in court.

    • otp@sh.itjust.works
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      5 months ago

      In the EU there is legal precedent to give access to every account of a deceased person to their next of kin.

      I thought we were discussing whether or not a game purchased on Steam is something that the purchaser “owns” just like a physical game…

      But if that precedent is there, it’ll be interesting to see it play out. Steam users in the EU have definitely died before, but I guess nobody has ever put one in their will yet? Or tried to do an account transfer?

      It’s one thing to share the credentials, but I don’t think we’ll see Steam games going from one account (owned by a deceased person) being transferred into an existing account of someone named in the will.

      …which, of course, would be perfectly possible to happen with physical games.