Someone born within the years 1992-1995. You can spot 'em easy.
What’s a doomer?
ijedi1234@sh.itjust.works 12 hours ago
loonsun@sh.itjust.works 11 hours ago
I feel attacked, I’m doing my best 😭
MotoAsh@lemmy.world 17 hours ago
Like a boomer, but even less respectable.
SolidShake@lemmy.world 15 hours ago
Oh. No I’m a millennial
TheHotze@lemmy.world 16 hours ago
Someone believes a cause is doomed from the start, so doesn’t even try.
SolidShake@lemmy.world 15 hours ago
Because gaming companies are all greedy fucks. They aren’t going to give a fuck about people’s signatures lmao. You have to not buy the game in the millions. Not sign a website, and still buy the games anyways
sp3ctr4l@lemmy.dbzer0.com 10 hours ago
Its not a meaningless web petition.
It’s a formal, direct democracy style legal process in the EU, to get the relevant legal authorities to review and revise the laws that currently allow gaming companies to be greedy fucks.
A similar concept exists in many US states amd cities:
If enough signatures can be gathered in a defined amount of time, then the proposed legal concept that has been directly endorsed by enough citizens then is automatically either pushed to the legislators and courts to review, or to be included for broader democratic voting up or down on by the next local election.
You apparently have no idea that initiatives and petitons can be more than just a legally non binding, essentially useless virtue signal.
In many, many parts of the world, something like an initiative serves as a way for the citizens of an area to bypass their own representatives and force them to directly engage with an issue.
If this initiative crosses the threshold, it stands s good chance at reforming the laws around games as a consumer product, from a consumer rights point of view.
Governments do actually have the ability to restrain and modify the actions and practices of corporations, by altering the laws that define what they are and are not allowed to do.
Further, because the EU has so many people, is such a large market for games… there is a good chance that if the EU reforms what game companies are allowed to do within the EU… well, developing an entirely different game for the EU and the US, totally different in the underlying internal design, more than just translstion/localization… from a business POV, it may end up making more financial sense to not essentially develop two games at once, and instead just develop a single, global game, that is compliant with with EU laws.
Go look into how digital privacy laws being different between the EU and US and other parts of the world are currently, right now, forcing many US based tech firms to alter their practices within the EU, and sometimes even in the US and elsewhere, due to the propagation effect of a huge market altering its laws.
…
And example of something like this is firearms in the US: California, and now several other US states, have passed laws stating that for certain kinds of guns, a magazine can hold no more than 10 rounds.
Prior to this, when such laws did not exist… not many firearm companies made and sold guns with only 10 round mags. Now, many of them actually do.
This has also occured at a Federal level with barrel length restrictions: Basically, you cannot sell a civillian a short barelled rifle, something that has a barrel less than 16 inches in length, or a total butt stock to tip of barrel length less than 26 inchds.
Before those laws were passed… you could buy those, companies could sell those.
But because a compact, higher powered rifle is the easiest thing to use in a confined space, for something like a school shooting… well, now all the guns have to be at least a bit bigger, so that they’re more difficult to use in a ‘moving from room to hallway to room’ kind of scenario.
…
Laws passed by governments can alter industry practices, thats the entire concept of regulation.
Laws and legal review processes can be formally initiated within a government by formal, legal, citizens initiatives.
Feathercrown@lemmy.world 12 hours ago
You speak on matters which you do not understand
MoreZombies@aussie.zone 12 hours ago
Ah, like PirateSoftware! :D
lime@feddit.nu 12 hours ago
eu citizens initiatives are official tools of the public to help draft new laws.
RicoBerto@piefed.blahaj.zone 15 hours ago
This isn't a petition like change.org.
It's to get this brought in front of politicians that HAVE to make a ruling based on it.
Tattorack@lemmy.world 11 hours ago
This is not a change.org petition. This is a European initiative. Meaning if this gets the necessary number of signatures this could get brought forth to the European Parliament, where laws on the subject can get negotiated over.
Hadriscus@jlai.lu 12 hours ago
I assume by “gaming companies” you mean game publishers. No they won’t care, in fact this initiative is not meant for them. It is meant for EU lawmakers, which after a certain signature number threshold are required to look at the issue. Once a protection is written into law, these same companies have to, of course, comply with it, or face whatever consequences were prepared for this case (fines, probably).
echodot@feddit.uk 11 hours ago
Oh come on you can’t actually be that dense. I don’t know if you’ve noticed but there are these things called laws and companies have to follow them.