An Australian politician wants Counter-Strike: GO to be defined as gambling
Valve's weapon skin economy under more scrutiny.
An
Australian senator has announced that he intends to introduce a bill defining
Counter-Strike: Counter Offensive as gambling, thanks to its weapon skin trading
system. In what looks to be a world first, independent senator Nick Xenophon
will introduce the bill when the Australian federal parliament resumes next
month.
Speaking
to the Sydney Morning Herald, the
senator said that Counter-Strike and similar games "purport to be one thing"
while they're actually "morphing into full-on gambling and that itself is
incredibly misleading and deceptive.
"This
is the Wild West of online gambling that is actually targeting kids," Xenophon
said.
According
to the report, the legislation could make it illegal for Valve to solicit
payments in exchange for items with different, or random, value. Or else, there
could be legislated age requirements to play any game featuring a similar
economy, or the requirement to warn of gambling related content.
Valve
has only recently made meaningful steps to curb the fledgling – but already very
prolific – skin gambling market. In a
statement issued earlier this month,
Valve made clear that it has no connection with any of the skin gambling sites
that have emerged since they introduced in-game item trading.
"A
number of gambling sites started leveraging the Steam trading system, and
there's been some false assumptions about our involvement with these sites," the
statement read. "We'd like to clarify that we have no business relationships
with any of these sites. We have never received any revenue from them. And Steam
does not have a system for turning in-game items into real world currency."
This
statement was prompted by this month's CSGO Lotto scandal, which involved two high
profile streamers failing to disclose their direct connection with the gambling
site they were promoting. Valve sent cease and desist letters to over 20 skin
gambling sites last month.
0 nhận xét:
Đăng nhận xét