gamerant.com

Fairy, do gaming w Ubisoft thinks it's okay to delete your games library now apparently

Apparently this is only for accounts with no games purchased/linked to them.

Norgur,

Until through some "error" ab account with games gets trashed. The reaction of Ubisoft's social media team is what worries me. They didn't go "no worries folks, this is just for empty accounts and we give warning even then". They went "we don't want this to happen, but y'all make us do it because you don't log in like we want you to".`

BudgetBandit, do games w Grand Theft Auto 6 is Poised to Break a Huge Rockstar Tradition | Game Rant

Has „milking the same game for over ten years“ become a tradition by now?

Grass,

Haha my first thought too.

Ekis, do gaming w Ubisoft Can Delete Inactive Accounts, Making Users Lose Access to Their Games

People need to realize that you do not own the games that you buy from stores such as Ubisoft and Steam. You are renting these games at best. These companies can deny access to your games at any time they see fit. Whether it’s deleting inactive accounts, a change of policy, business going bankrupt or any act of god.

This is why I only buy games from stores such as GOG or itch.io where I actually receive a DRM-free copy of the game. It’s mine forever so long as I back it up; which is not hard to do since storage is so cheap nowadays.

Quexotic, do gaming w Ubisoft Can Delete Inactive Accounts, Making Users Lose Access to Their Games

So, if you want access to the games you paid for, you need to pirate them?

Contend6248,

Yes that, or skip the paying part.

Quexotic,

What does seem to make the whole process more efficient doesn’t it? LOL

Contend6248,

I mean they save their bandwidth, space for personal data and computing tasks and you safe money.

Win-Win

Quexotic,

You are cracking me up, internet friend.

query,

Definitely no reason to buy games if they can get away with pretending that you didn’t.

Gutotito, do gaming w Ubisoft thinks it's okay to delete your games library now apparently
@Gutotito@kbin.social avatar

As if we needed another reason to not buy Ubisoft crap.

jcarax, do gaming w Ubisoft Can Delete Inactive Accounts, Making Users Lose Access to Their Games

It’s annoying enough that Netflix removes my account and watched history, after I go a few months without the service. But I still deal with it a couple times a year. This… this makes me just want to never touch anything Ubisoft ever again.

HurlingDurling,

Honestly I think I just have black flag on my goobysoft account and I haven’t plaid it for so long I don’t care if I loose my account, but if I ever want to play that game again and it’s gone, I will pirate the shit out of it

jcarax,

That’s an Assassin’s Creed game, yeah? I don’t know, I tried an AS game at one point, and just couldn’t get into it. I was excited for The Division for awhile, then it released. I wanted to like Far Cry, but didn’t like the mechanics. I really don’t see anything in their recent catalog that I give two shits about.

Ostermac, do gaming w Ubisoft thinks it's okay to delete your games library now apparently

Just like Steam. Stop simping for big game corp.

nakal,
@nakal@kbin.social avatar

Please explain. When did Steam delete a game from your library?

Norgur,

Or an account for inactivity

esaru, (edited ) do gaming w Ubisoft Can Delete Inactive Accounts, Making Users Lose Access to Their Games

Why do people think they are “buying” something when in fact they are “renting”. Everything that’s not in your power is not in your posession, hence it’s not something you have bought. This counts for ebooks with DRM as well as those online games. Amazon and other companies call it “buying” to make people believe it’s equal to real books, games ect. in their posession, and people do believe it.

Quexotic,

Ubisoft appears to have just raised the white flag to all of the seafarers. Yarrrr.

alehel, do gaming w Ubisoft Can Delete Inactive Accounts, Making Users Lose Access to Their Games

Isn’t this a GDPR requirement if enough time passes without account activity?

lloram239,

GDPR allows you to keep data as long as you need it to run your business, which in the case of online game store would be basically forever. The only data that has a time limit is stuff like log files and the like, which you might need to catch cheaters and hackers, but is useless after a few weeks or months.

alehel,

Ah, thanks for the correction.

sculd, do gaming w Ubisoft Can Delete Inactive Accounts, Making Users Lose Access to Their Games

If you are still buying Ubisoft games in 2023 you are part of the problem.

GeekFTW, do gaming w Ubisoft thinks it's okay to delete your games library now apparently
@GeekFTW@kbin.social avatar

And this is why it's always morally ok to pirate anything Ubisoft puts out!

aksdb, do gaming w Ubisoft Can Delete Inactive Accounts, Making Users Lose Access to Their Games

Oooh, I would really like to see that challanged in front of a German court after such a deletion happened. There are so many different legal facettes here.

  • Is the deletion maybe necessary due to GDPR? (they have to keep the minimum amount of data)
  • What’s with the physical copies / codes that were bought. Should they automatically be freed up for re-use once the account that claimed them is deleted? (That would kinda make sense to me.)
  • What about stricly digitally bought games?
  • How far are their ToS valid in our jurisdiction?

Damn I really hope they do this to the wrong person and rub them the wrong way so they get dragged to court for this.

GeneralRetreat,

Data Protection shouldn’t be a relevant issue - at least not in the sense that it forcss them to delete accounts. When you process data under the GDPR, you have to identify a lawful basis.

I assume that transactions through the eStore would be handled under the contract basis, with the hosting of the game in the library forming part of the contractual relationship. That would enable them to maintain an account for as long as the contractual relationship persisted.

That basically means GDPR doesn’t force them to close an account, they close an account based on their policies because they choose to. That’ll be based on their T&Cs, so things will fundamentally circle back to whether their T&Cs are legitimate and lawful.

It is possible that a data subject could potentially raise a claim for damages under the GDPR, on the grounds that the deletion of their account is a breach of contract that amounts to an availability data breach.

erwan,

Some companies decide to delete user content not because it’s necessary for GDPR, but because it’s the simplest way for them to deal with GDPR.

Flashbert,

GDPR clearly says, if there is a valid reason for storing your data, they can store it (no timelimit). Like you can store data for invoices etc for 10 years too even when you ask them for deleting your data.

Iguesseverybody also agreed to it when you registered.

I do not see any valid reason why they would delete acvounts, like saving 1 line in a database?

MJBrune,

Valve has a TOS that lets them do the exact same thing. So it’d be interesting indeed.

TheTrueLinuxDev, do gaming w Ubisoft Can Delete Inactive Accounts, Making Users Lose Access to Their Games

I knew putting Ubisoft on the blacklist was a good idea a decade ago. Everyone should blacklist them as well, just let them die as a company.

SoNick,

@TheTrueLinuxDev They briefly gained my support with the community outreach they used to do with Rocksmith 2014...
Then they launched the shitty subscription service Rocksmith+ and fired most of their community team and I remembered that yeah this is still fucking Ubisoft I was dealing with

@Chozo

ProgrammerHero, do gaming w Ubisoft Can Delete Inactive Accounts, Making Users Lose Access to Their Games

seems i lost my games then will check it now.

EveryMuffinIsNowEncrypted, do gaming w Ubisoft Can Delete Inactive Accounts, Making Users Lose Access to Their Games

This is why I buy all my games on either GOG or Itch.

Yes, they definitely have their problems, but at least I can download an offline installer for pretty much any game I buy. Sure, GOG or Itch could still take them down in the future, but they can’t take away the offline installers I have backed up on separate external HDDs.

ndguardian,

I’m not as familiar with Itch but it works the same as GOG in that you can download the installer and keep it, no special activations or DRM required. Right? Because I definitely love that aspect of GOG. I just wish it had a larger library.

octobob,

I just wish GOG would utilize Proton to make way for broad Linux support. It would be a slam dunk for them in terms of their userbase.

octobob,

deleted_by_author

  • Loading...
  • Helvedeshunden,

    Just use the fantastic Heroic Games Launcher.

    madnerds,

    Yep, heroic is fantastic

    dragonfly4933,

    Bottles is pretty good. It’s available on flathub.

    EveryMuffinIsNowEncrypted,

    I believe it does. I don’t really buy many games on Itch to be honest but from what I understand and from the handful of games I have obtained from there (mostly just free games), that is indeed how it works.

    And agreed. Definitely wish GOG had a larger library.

  • Wszystkie
  • Subskrybowane
  • Moderowane
  • Ulubione
  • rowery
  • Technologia
  • krakow
  • test1
  • muzyka
  • shophiajons
  • NomadOffgrid
  • esport
  • informasi
  • FromSilesiaToPolesia
  • fediversum
  • retro
  • ERP
  • Travel
  • Spoleczenstwo
  • gurgaonproperty
  • Psychologia
  • Gaming
  • slask
  • nauka
  • sport
  • niusy
  • antywykop
  • Blogi
  • lieratura
  • motoryzacja
  • giereczkowo
  • warnersteve
  • Wszystkie magazyny