• Zagorath@aussie.zone
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    2 个月前

    We can blame the religious organisation as much as we want, but the fundamental problem here is payment processors. They should be common carriers. Content-neutral middlemen who facilitate payment to anything that isn’t literally unlawful. This is no different to an ISP throttling access to Netflix because they operate their own streaming platform. If the storefront, the developer, and the buyer are all ok with a transaction, there’s no good reason for a fourth party to stand in the way of that.

    • gAlienLifeform@lemmy.world
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      2 个月前

      Yeah, payment processing is among the many many many industries that ought to be nationalized so they can be administered in a transparent and democratic manner (see also, healthcare education housing electricity internet etc.)

      There’s just too much opportunity to use it to manipulate markets and oppress minority viewpoints for it to remain in private hands imo

      • DreamlandLividity@lemmy.world
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        2 个月前

        Putting the ridicoulous idea that governments are fair and transparent aside, payment processors need to be international. Otherwise, most countries will not be able to access services because their local payment processor is not supported by smaller websites.

        However, the payment processors should be regulated with something similar to net neutrality so they can’t discriminate payments. And EU could probably launch a government run competitor to dilute their duopoly.

      • chunes@lemmy.world
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        2 个月前

        To me it’s insane that food also isn’t on that list. Anything that isn’t a luxury can’t be trusted to be handled by capitalism.

      • stephen01king@piefed.zip
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        2 个月前

        Do you really think most governments will administer payment processes in a transparent and democratic manner?

        • AnyOldName3@lemmy.world
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          2 个月前

          They can do a really shit job of administering payment processes in a transparent and democratic manner before they end up being worse than the status quo where it’s entirely untransparent and undemocratic. Also, governments already have the power to make things they don’t like illegal, so there’s no reason to expect they’d block payments for things they’ve left legal, whereas payment processors currently block plenty of legal things.

          • stephen01king@piefed.zip
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            2 个月前

            So you expect governments like the Trump administration or Saudi Arabia will less likely block porn games than for profit companies?

            You do realise this happened because thousands of people called the payment processors to complain about it, which means with thousands of people, you can pressure these companies to change their mind again. Try doing that to your own government, let alone a foreign government.

            • phdepressed@sh.itjust.works
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              2 个月前

              That’s literally what calling your government representatives is. You’re supposed to be able to pressure your representative to represent you.

              • MyDarkestTimeline01@ani.social
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                2 个月前

                I agree with your statement, but we are currently seeing politicians actively ignore their constituents wishes on policy.

                Since people don’t like hearing what I’m saying I’ll reference the situation

                Mitch McConnell is actively going against his former constituents and telling Repub reps to go against their constituents over Medicare/Medicaid. Saying “They’ll get over it.”

                Several states voted to uphold abortion rights only to have their elected officials ignore them and ban those rights.

                If a human is involved in any capacity, fallibility is built in. We may not like it, but it’s a fact.

              • stephen01king@piefed.zip
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                2 个月前

                Your government representative only has a voice in the government, but they don’t control it. Calling for profit companies en masse pushes your message directly to the people in charge who are scared of losing profits over this.

                Tell me, when has calling your representatives ever resulted in a change in government policy within a reasonable time span? How often does a government do a major change in policy without you needing to vote someone out first?

                • gAlienLifeform@lemmy.world
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                  2 个月前

                  en masse

                  That sounds wonderful to me, I just want that mass of righteous people to write down all of their ideas so future generations can continue their work even after the fervor has died down. I call those ideas laws and regulations and the ongoing spirit of that mass of righteous people a government, but I’m not too attached to semantics.

            • AnyOldName3@lemmy.world
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              2 个月前

              At the moment, they’re already at risk of being removed by the government, who can make them illegal, and simultaneously at risk of being removed by payment processors, who can prevent the stores from operating. It makes no difference to the government whether they’re also the payment processor. They could remove them anyway. Having two entities with unilateral power to remove something can’t be worse than just having one of them.

              • stephen01king@piefed.zip
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                2 个月前

                The US goverment can’t make porn illegal in another country. A US owned payment processor can force other stores in other countries that uses their service to save money to ban porn as well. You’re just advocating for giving governments of wealthier countries more control over smaller ones. I say no thanks to that nightmare scenario.

                Why don’t you prove your government can do their job and prevent payment processors from being such massive monopolies and maybe I’d trust that they won’t immediately abuse their power.

            • petrol_sniff_king
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              2 个月前

              you can pressure these companies to change their mind again. Try doing that to your own government,

              Jesus christ.

              Okay, buddy, I’m giving you homework: you need to attend 10 city halls and 5 protests by the end of this year.

              • stephen01king@piefed.zip
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                2 个月前

                Tell me when you guys finally get free healthcare and sane gun control laws.

                How about something simpler, then? Get back to me when you guys finally stop funding Israel’s genocide.

                Even easier? Get your government to stop vetoing any UN resolution for a ceasefire in Palestine.

                Show me how easy it is to change your government’s mind. I’ll wait.

                • petrol_sniff_king
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                  2 个月前

                  Why should it be easy? Do you only do things that are easy? Was World War II easy?

                  Your forefathers spent months, years, working on projects some of them didn’t even live to see completed. You want your activism to be easy? This is pathetic.

                  Of what use are you to humanity if the only victories you’ll reach for are ones doable over a saturday? Whose grandchildren should even bother to remember your name?

                  When we win this one back, I think VISA should restrict you specifically from buying any porn games.

        • gAlienLifeform@lemmy.world
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          2 个月前

          I think it is possible to have a government that functions in this way on a long term basis. I don’t think the same can be said of for profit companies.

          • stephen01king@piefed.zip
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            2 个月前

            A for profit company can be replaced with another and is more easily affected by boycotts. A goverment is neither easily replaced or influenced by people from other countries.

            • gAlienLifeform@lemmy.world
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              2 个月前

              Until they monopolize their industry, which is something they’re always going to be trying to do by their very nature as for profits and which has already essentially happened here

              A government can be influenced if it is transparent and democratic, which can be ensured if they’ve got good bylaws that are being scrupulously enforced. Like, if you have decisionmakers a) accountable to free and fair elections (whether they’re elected directly or appointed by elected people) holding b) regular and public meetings where c) outside organizations can raise disputes and get them decided under d) neutral procedures that are published in advance and that every party has equal opportunity to understand and take advantage of, and e) if those decisions and the reasoning behind them are also published and cited as precedent to be reinforced or overturned in subsequent decisions, then I really think the rest takes care of itself.

              And I think we had a lot of this figured out when we got done fighting totalitarian regimes in the 1940s and turned around and passed the Administrative Procedure Act, but conservatives keep adding loopholes and trying to drag all of us back to feudalism and monarchies.

              • stephen01king@piefed.zip
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                2 个月前

                So you admitted that people have succeeded in adding loopholes to the US government that makes all your argument no longer true, and you think they still should be allowed handle payment processing? To me it just sounds like you’re arguing for transferring the power from one corruptible party (for-profit payment company) to another one (the government).

                It would be easier for the government to actually regulate payment processors so they don’t become so big that they can influence online stores that use them than preventing people in governments from turning corrupt and misusing the control over payment processes. Even then, the US government has failed to do the former, so how do we expect them to do the latter?

        • ShinkanTrain@lemmy.ml
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          2 个月前

          A lot of governments already do. The credit card duopoly is the reason the US decided to come after Brazil’s solution.

          Why would a government just block payments for something it doesn’t like instead of, you know, making it illegal, which it already can do. I doesn’t need to block my payment to the heroin store, because the heroin store isn’t legally allowed to operate.

          • stephen01king@piefed.zip
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            2 个月前

            Because they can’t make it illegal in another country. I’m sure plenty of countries would just use US or China owned payment processors rather than spending money to set up their own. This would just give them more control over other countries than they already have now.

        • Altima NEO@lemmy.zip
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          2 个月前

          It’ll end up like the shit we’ve got going on now with. ICE being given access to Medicaid and tax records in order to deport more people.

          • petrol_sniff_king
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            2 个月前

            What is stopping the government from just commandeering PayPal’s records?

      • HiTekRedNek@lemmy.world
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        2 个月前

        So you want Trump and MAGA politicians to be able to deny your payments instead?

        The problem with “just let the government do it” is when the government is run by people like this.

        • petrol_sniff_king
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          2 个月前

          So don’t let them.

          Basically nothing works if no one cares about their community. One of the reasons Trump is in power right now is because of a deep seated American apathy for, like… everything.

          Trump, et. al., are dismantling USPS, but I like USPS. It’s bad that they’re doing that.

          • HiTekRedNek@lemmy.world
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            2 个月前

            How naive can you be? You think your vote matters here?

            When every single district has been gerrymandered to death for 100 years, nobody’s vote really matters anymore.

            • petrol_sniff_king
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              2 个月前

              Your cynicism can’t defeat me, man. I am God’s holy warrior. I crush weak pessimism like yours beneath the weight of my iron will.

              How is it you think private companies will be more easily coercible when Trump’s cronies are the private sector?

              • HiTekRedNek@lemmy.world
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                2 个月前

                Rofl. Your god can eat a dick. I’ve seen exactly what your god does.

                It’s easier to start a competing company than it is to start a competing government.

                You need a powerful standing army for the latter, and standing armies are part of why we’re in the trouble we’re in.

                • petrol_sniff_king
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                  2 个月前

                  It’s easier to start a competing company than it is to start a competing government.

                  Not when Trump’s government refuses to do anything about all the slapp suits PayPal levies against you for treading on their financial turf.

                  You need a powerful standing army for the latter,

                  Corporations, without oversight, just become warlords with their own standing armies. You’re not getting out of this one through the low effort of simply buying a different brand of latte, man, I’m sorry.

            • mushroomman_toad@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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              2 个月前

              How does Putin’s boot taste?

              Oppression isn’t inevitable, even in the US, and you’ll never have the equitable anarchism you’re advocating for if the state doesn’t put a stop to these oligopolies.

              • HiTekRedNek@lemmy.world
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                2 个月前

                You are wildly off base if you think I have any love for that monster.

                You are also completely wrong in that oppression is the natural state of power.

                • mushroomman_toad@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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                  2 个月前

                  How naive can you be? You think your vote matters here?
                  When every single district has been gerrymandered to death for 100 years, nobody’s vote really matters anymore.

                  This is a very Russian mindset and exactly the kind of beliefs that created Putin. I’m not saying you support him, but I’m saying you are giving him your support either way.

    • NuXCOM_90Percent@lemmy.zip
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      2 个月前

      The reason for a “fourth party” is because so many of these are fully international.

      The dream of cryptocurrency as actual currency (rather than just reinventing stocks) was the idea that you could use your bitcoin wallet to pay for a pizza in Kansas, London, other London, Shanghai, or Timbuktu with no perceived difference. That IS what visa/mastercard provide.

      Get rid of that “fourth party” and now every single online service needs to have office space in every single country so that they can accept and convert purchases on their own. And the end result will just be dropping the majority of the world.

  • TommySoda@lemmy.world
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    2 个月前

    It’s the same religious organization that went after them NSFW games on Steam. Like the games or not, it’s always a slippery slope with this kind of censorship.

    • Tony Bark@pawb.socialOP
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      Of course it would be the bible thumpers. Gotta stick their nose into everyone’s business.

      • OutlierBlue@lemmy.ca
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        2 个月前

        If it’s against your religion to play porn games, fine. Don’t play them.

        But fuck off if you think you can tell other people what not to play.

        • MyDarkestTimeline01@ani.social
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          2 个月前

          But that involves self regulation. And being able to resist temptation. And they’d just rather have temptation removed before they could encounter.

        • CileTheSane@lemmy.ca
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          2 个月前

          “it’s against my religion to eat fish.”

          “Okay, then don’t eat fish.”

          “It’s against my religion for you to eat fish”

          “Fuck off.”

      • Altima NEO@lemmy.zip
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        2 个月前

        The fact that they’ve been successful at censoring stuff is a problem. It will likely embolden them to do worse.

        • NuXCOM_90Percent@lemmy.zip
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          Not just successful. But praised.

          Even on Lemmy, if you go check out the initial threads on the Steam censorship you’ll see lots of “It is just incest and furry shit. Of course that should be banned” style comments. Less so here, but plenty of other boards and influencers immediately then chimed in that porn addiction is the real problem and you should watch a stream of a nice bigoted white man rather than give in to it and blah blah blah.

          And it didn’t even start there. It ALSO isn’t the start, but the attack on Pornhub a few years back was a big watershed moment where this exact same attack was used (pressure the credit card companies to not do business with a morally dubious site). On the surface? Pornhub is full of revenge porn and child porn so it needs to be destroyed. No rational person would disagree with that… and everyone quietly ignored all the data showing that (and this was early 2020s…) facebook and twitter and instagram and so forth had MUCH more of both of those. But hey, Pornhub Corp complied and actually instituted some REALLY good policies that more or less equates to signed consent forms for every single performer. And… they were still on the shitlist. But everyone had stopped caring.

  • Cyberflunk@lemmy.world
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    2 个月前
    Collective shout finacials
    year: 2024
    revenue: 458043
    employee_expenses: 107000
    other_expenses: 215488
    net_surplus: 135555
    employees: 
      total_fte: 2
      full_time: 0
      part_time: 1
      casual: 4
    volunteers: 15
    donations_and_bequests: 389800
    government_grants: 0
    commercial_income: 0
    expense_to_revenue_ratio: "70.4%"
    average_expense_per_employee: 39400
    
    Leadership
    - name: Melinda Tankard Reist
      role: Founder, Movement Director
      public_socials:
        - Twitter: @MelTankardReist
        - Instagram: @collective.shout
      public_email_address: Not publicly listed
      salary: Not publicly listed
    
    - name: Caitlin Roper
      role: Campaigns Manager
      public_socials:
        - Instagram: @collective.shout
      public_email_address: Not publicly listed
      salary: Not publicly listed
    
    - name: Renee Chopping
      role: Campaigns Strategy
      public_socials:
        - LinkedIn
      public_email_address: r******@collectiveshout.org
      salary: Not publicly listed
    
    - name: Lyn Swanson Kennedy
      role: Campaigns Strategy
      public_socials:
        - Instagram: @collective.shout
      public_email_address: Not publicly listed
      salary: Not publicly listed
    
    - name: Coralie Alison
      role: Movement Operations Manager
      public_socials:
        - Twitter: @CoralieAlison
        - Instagram: @collective.shout
      public_email_address: Not publicly listed
      salary: Not publicly listed
    

    Fuck.

    These.

    Fucking.

    Shitsucking

    Subhuman

    Leeches

  • mesa@piefed.social
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    2 个月前

    Wonder how long it will take for them to start going after LGBT+ stuff. Hope I’m wrong.

  • Jo Miran@lemmy.ml
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    2 个月前

    It’s not difficult to imagine what kind of expression these groups might decide to deem as unacceptable next.

    Literally the bottom line. They have found something that works, and they are going to use and abuse it.

    • MyDarkestTimeline01@ani.social
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      It has been my experience that when either side says that they are against cancel culture it’s not about being against the ability to ruin or deprive their enemies of something. They’re against their enemies having the ability to do the same thing to them.

  • ‮redirtSdeR@lemmy.world
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    2 个月前

    Damn guess we’ll need to move to the alternative- ah wait- no- itch was the alternative.


    I wonder if a federated game platform would work as an idea or if that’s just an inherently bad idea due to the nature of trusting strangers with your money.

    • rickrolled767@ttrpg.network
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      Still wouldn’t address the root problem here: payment processing companies have the power to just deny payment from even happening.

      Unless you’re referring to making a federated platform that instead allows devs to connect with buyers and make transactions off channel.

      Would limit widespread issues like this but now you’re opening a whole new can of worms with trust

    • Croquette@sh.itjust.works
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      Without payments processors, they can’t sell games.

      Having a federated platform wouldn’t mean much if the payments processors blanket ban the platform.

        • Croquette@sh.itjust.works
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          Someone’s gonna process the payment between the two banks, adding an intermediary between both banks won’t help much when it will be denied processing as well.

    • Chloé 🥕
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      2 个月前

      the problem is the payment processors, not itch

      unless you’re fine with crypto, sending cheques by mail or having everything be free, your new platform is gonna get the same problems once it’s big enough to be noticed

  • ManOMorphos@lemmy.world
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    I think it’s time for a game platform divorced from Visa/Mastercard to rise to the occasion and step in for these platforms. Websites without these processors already exist, so the model is proven to work well enough (it’s less convenient for sure).

    I wouldn’t think the US would be a good country for this hypothetical store though. I think it’s only a matter of time until they attack the publishers and studios directly. I’m not counting on the 1st amendment to help anyone.

  • gressen@lemmy.zip
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    2 个月前

    I’m just learning about this and I wonder what has Steam done in this case to protect my rights as their client.

  • ShaggySnacks@lemmy.myserv.one
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    2 个月前

    Collective Shout describe themselves as a “grassroots campaigns movement against the objectification of women and the sexualisation of girls”, but are associated with outspokenly homophobic and anti-abortion Christian conservative groups, according to a now-deleted Vice article. They recently claimed credit for the campaign that saw payment providers pressuring the online storefronts to remove content the group deemed unacceptable.

    It’s not hard to empathise with the folks behind Itch for being placed in an impossible position, but their lack of forewarning has left creators blindsided and in some cases, seemingly without income. “I wish we had gotten some warning from Steam and Itch,” wrote game developer Robert Yang on Bluesky, “but we already know it’s Collective Shout + payment processors waging culture war against LGBTQ people and sexual expression. I guess there’s nothing else for Steam and Itch to say”.

    Personally speaking, I’d be willing to extend that good faith to Itch.io themselves, but they aren’t the one holding the gun to their own heads here. That’d be financial companies, pressured by Collective Shout, who themselves have ties to an organisation whose CEO once described gay marriage as an “unspeakable offence to God”. It’s not difficult to imagine what kind of expression these groups might decide to deem as unacceptable next.