this post was submitted on 21 Sep 2023
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Then why don't illegal obtained keys just become banned? As long as they don't, You can't expect customers to see any problem with them.
It's technically impossible to differentiate a legitimate key from an illegal key. They are usually created in batches to be distributed. So they are legitimate and exist way before the fraud takes place. By the time there's a charge-back on the purchase, whether the key is illegal or not is irrelevant. The damage is done, banning the user does literally nothing. The developer is still on the hook with the processing fees and the user already downloaded and installed the game.
Not only that, but those users thought they were buying legit keys, and expect support from the original publisher. Pirates never expect support.
Factorio devs literally said to pirate their game rather than buy from one of these reseller sites.
For what it is, a top down 2d factory game, Factorio rocks. Just wanted to add that in, it's one of the more recent games that I managed to put hundreds of hours in before even getting to the finished achievement. Though I did use mods to make it worth that time as they make the chains pretty complex. To get to the end of vanilla isn't overly difficult but I had over 150 before launching rocket due to trying mods and restarting but really that's just the tutorial before you understand you want to launch so many rockets per minute to get bigger numbers.
Those devs always had weekly updates on what they were working on, fixed performance issues over the years and made a quality product. No this is not paid advertising but they are devs worth supporting overall.
This is not true, keys are unique therefore it is technically very possible to track their way of payment.
No there isnt. Find interviews from developers on this. They go deep and technical with the detail. They create the keys at a different time. Yes, they are unique. But they're not associated with the payment, only to the user who claims them in a DRM platform. Only the retailer knows the payment details. If it's a reseller with stolen cards, then no detail arrives to the developer, just a transaction then a transaction reversal. The developer doesn't know which client owned the card that reversed the payment, nor which key was given by the retailer to the final customer.
Them not being associated to the payment is the dev's or better the store manager's fault and not a technical limitation. Tbh as a dev, i would try to make the store manager follow his responsibilities to properly keep track of payments.
Good luck with that champ. I'm sure you're a special boy that you and you alone, will achieve what hundreds of small and large companies with whole teams of engineers and lawyers have not done in the past 15 years.
I'm not going to do their work (as they're not going to do mine) but good luck to You for defending the incapabilities of crybabies.
No, no. You said you would do it. Don't abandon us now. You, as a dev, are obviously superior and more capable than any of the hundreds of thousands of people who currently make up the industry. You are unique and special, help us for we are incapable and dysfunctional babies, effectively braindead without your almighty guidance. Your biggest and smoothest of brain is the only solution to this conundrum that trillion dollar companies are incapable of solving. You and only you can save the video games. You ARE the ultimate game dev. Don't forsake us, great one!
Acting pathetic doesn't solve your problems.
See it doesn't matter how keys are generated as they're sold on an individual basis. Thus You can keep track of the exact credit card transaction that was used to buy each key. If You don't save this information linked to each other then it's your fault as the store manager. Don't try to shift a problem of sales management to the customer. It doesn't solve your problem but makes you looking yuck.
Again, devs don't have access to the customer credit card data, there are laws, banks aren't allowed to share that certain personal information. Devs aren't retailers, they don't manage the store. By law, the store manager is NOT allowed to share certain information. That's why keys were invented in the first place. But even if the developers knew which key corresponds to a reversed card transaction, why would you punish the person who got scammed? Do you also advocate for prison time for theft victims? It is the stupidest argument to make. You have absolutely no idea what you're talking about. You don't understand the problem and instead of accepting your ignorance, you double down on your own stupidity. Stop, get help.
I never wrote that devs have access to cc information, but sales departement has. This is due to information responsibilities of the cc service when they reverse transactions.
Anyways, following your argumentation: how does it make sense for the store to punish the devs when on the other hand it doesn't make sense (for you) to punish the customer? And why the heck do devs still blame customers but not the shop? Remember: the shop is selling keys and it is the shops work to keep track of payment information.
Sorry to say but your logic is still yuck.
Exactly, it doesn't make sense that the devs are left with the transaction fees. But it's the way it is set up legally speaking right now. That's why most devs suggest to people to please pirate the game instead of using resellers and risking a scam. They are being kind with users and not banning keys or users, because it's technically almost impossible and makes no ethical sense.
But by now you've proven to be too stupid and/or immoral to understand the point. So I'm going to stop wasting my time with you and stop replying.
It's not set up this way legally, it is set up this way because devs and sales commited to this practice. Still devs are trying to blame the customers for a problem that is clearly originated on the sales management side.
Btw. this is not about morality but about legality and the lack of responsibility at the sales-side, trying to play this card is just a sign of you going out of arguments and ... I wrote this already... does make your POV look yuck.
Anyways, appreciated our lil discussions so thx for your time, live long and prosper!
They would if they were easily identifiable. IIRC Steam might revoke them if the key is bought with stolen cards and their owners perform a chargeback.
Thing is for copyright law those keys are 100% legal.
EDIT: I explicitly said for copyright law. It's how users justify that "they are not pirating", except it's much worse because game developers need to deal with fees anyway after chargeback.