- cross-posted to:
- pcgaming@lemmy.ca
- cross-posted to:
- pcgaming@lemmy.ca
Who’d have thought self regulation does not work
of
Have.
Not the first time ive made this mistake, spent all of my life up until last month not knowing 🥲 so getting used to this
Yeah I was the same, couldn’t believe it… I use this site with my students: https://www.perfect-english-grammar.com/could-have-should-have-would-have.html
Woulda coulda shoulda
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I edited
Even the Guardian can’t abide by the one-click reject all cookie option.
Nothing inside a video game should cost real money. Half-measures will not work - these people will design new approaches to the same old tricks. They’re game developers.
Loot boxes barely even exist anymore, because people finally acknowledged they’re awful and abusive. The abuse did not stop. The abuse got worse. Real-money fees inside games have only grown more prevalent. It’s now half the industry’s revenue. All they did was convince players to focus on the carrot and ignore the stick. Even when the carrot is an empty promise and the whacks from the stick are very real.
We cannot be surprised that a medium built on manipulating customers for their enjoyment can also manipulate customers out of sheer bottomless greed.
This is the best summary I could come up with:
The UK government’s decision to let technology companies self-regulate gambling-style loot boxes in video games has been called into question, after some of the developers put in charge of new industry guidelines broke their own rules.
In the past six months, the advertising regulator has upheld complaints against three companies involved in drawing up industry rules, including the leading developer Electronic Arts (EA), for failing to disclose that their games contained loot boxes.
Loot boxes are in-game features that allow players to pay, with real money or virtual currency, to open a digital envelope containing random prizes, such as an outfit or a weapon for a character.
Since then, Leon Xiao, an expert on loot-box regulation and PhD fellow at the IT University of Copenhagen, said hundreds of adverts for games, more than 90% of those he examined, did not abide by the group’s own rule on disclosure.
Don Foster, the chair of the House of Lords group Peers for Gambling Reform, said: “‘It is abundantly clear that self-regulation does not work and that the government must intervene to properly regulate loot boxes and their marketing to protect children.”
The UK gaming trade body Ukie said its members hoped to implement their new guidelines by July 2024, to “improve protections for all players and underline the industry’s commitment to safe and responsible play”.
The original article contains 756 words, the summary contains 223 words. Saved 71%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!