This is a deeply concerning development, though not an entirely surprising one. While I sympathize with itch.io's position - being caught between their creators and their payment processors - the broader implications here are alarming.
Payment processors have effectively become unelected censorship boards with the power to strangle entire categories of legal content by threatening to cut off the economic infrastructure that platforms depend on. The fact that a single advocacy campaign can pressure Visa/Mastercard/PayPal into forcing platforms to remove legal adult content should concern anyone who values free expression online.
The fundamental issue isn't whether you personally approve of adult games or specific content - it's that a handful of payment companies now wield veto power over what legal content can exist in the digital economy. This represents a massive concentration of censorial authority in the hands of unaccountable corporate entities that face no meaningful democratic oversight.
We've seen this pattern repeatedly: PayPal blocking VPN providers over "piracy concerns," Visa suspending payments to adult sites, and now this coordinated pressure campaign. Each time, legal content gets effectively banned not through legislation or courts, but through corporate policy decisions made behind closed doors.
By inserting themselves as moral arbiters for the digital economy and free expression on the internet, these processors are creating a very strong case for being designated as common carriers or being subjected to much stricter public utility regulation. When payment infrastructure becomes as essential as electricity or telephone service for participating in the digital economy, treating these companies as neutral utilities rather than editorial boards becomes not just reasonable but necessary.
perihelions · 1d ago
> "We've seen this pattern repeatedly: PayPal blocking VPN providers over "piracy concerns," Visa suspending payments to adult sites, and now this coordinated pressure campaign."
And more: before those, there was also Wikileaks[0,1], SciHub[2], and Tor[3]—among other high-profile acts of authoritarian censorship. There's countless others if you search HN—hard to sort them out for the sheer volume.
I'm very puzzled as to how these "advocacy campaigns" are able to control all of the payment processors like this. That Collective Shout "open letter" must be the tip of the iceberg.
phendrenad2 · 14h ago
Yes it's puzzling. And I don't buy the answers to your comment so far. Chargebacks? Wanting to control everything? Those are just silly hand-waving explanations that lack supportive evidence. They sound good to the people who say them, but I want more. I want data. Or at least some "aha!" evidence. Or, at least I can make up my own hand-wavy speculation.
These groups like "Collective Shout" don't seem organic to me. Where do they find members? In churches? I'm pretty clued-in to the going on in various churches, nobody knows anything about Collective Shout. It just materialized out of thin air, with a slick website and loudly claiming responsibility for these bans. "Look at us! We did this! No need to look elsewhere!"
Let me put on my aluminum-foil hat for a minute... Could this all be social engineering by some government agency that wants to ban porn (not outright, but make porn sites go out of business) to increase the birth rate to avoid demographic collapse? Just asking questions here.
colpabar · 1d ago
I think that payment processors want to be able to control everything. I don't think they care about adult content per se, they care about being able to allow/deny anything for any reason. They also don't really care about "hate speech", which is what gets censored when dems are in power. Republicans are in power now, so they're going after adult content. But to me, it seems like they only do it this way because it's easier than doing everything at once. Their real goal, the goal that they will mask with moral concerns about things like hate speech and adult content, is to have full control over who and what can use their payment systems without any restrictions. It seems be be working really well because instead of everyone fighting censorship by payment processors as a whole, half of us choose not to care when it happens to the other half. I really struggle reading these threads because the "it's a private company that can do what they want and if you don't like it build your own" argument is seared into my memory from when this started happening years ago.
thewebguyd · 1d ago
> I really struggle reading these threads because the "it's a private company that can do what they want and if you don't like it build your own" argument is seared into my memory from when this started happening years ago.
My answer to that has always been - if a "private company" is so important and critical to a nation or economy, like a payment processor, then that company has lost the right to be private and needs to be nationalized and become a public service. Had this argument all the time back in '08; if a company needs bailed out by the government or the nation/economy will collapse, its clearly too important to be a private for profit enterprise and should be nationalized and become a public service
Not everything needs, nor should be, a private enterprise for profit. Payment processors, utilities, etc. should just be public services, available to all equally and for all legal purposes.
rsync · 1d ago
It need not be that extreme… what with the theft and confiscation of property, etc.
A much milder, and more sensible, expression of your underlying sentiment is:
If an activity becomes this essential, the government should provide a competitive entrant in the same field.
Now the incumbent provider has competition, and there is a market participant tied to other incentives, etc.
No theft necessary.
autoexec · 15m ago
> If an activity becomes this essential, the government should provide a competitive entrant in the same field.
I'd agree, although considering our nation's decline into an authoritarian state I wouldn't trust a government competitor to be any better about protecting artistic works from censorship. Project 2025 makes the administration's feelings on this topic pretty clear.
ndkap · 5h ago
Agreed. When people say that we need to privatize something because the government is not doing its job effectively, I always think that the government is not doing its job effectively because of the lack of competition. If you just replace the governmental entity with a private entity, then you would end up with more problems than before. The better way to approach this would be to create a governmental entity that competes with the private sector. Each can keep the other in check with competition. For example, in the case of tax prep in the US, the government can set up a competing entity that makes the tax prep software and keep turbo tax in check.
thewebguyd · 23h ago
> If an activity becomes this essential, the government should provide a competitive entrant in the same field.
I'll admit I didn't even think of that, and yeah I'd agree that's a good solution worth pursuing in cases like this. I can think of many industries where we need to inject competition into the market.
harrisi · 21h ago
I don't understand how this would work. If the government created some entity to handle processing payments (or whatever), I assume it would be a publicly funded non-profit, since there is precedent for that. How much funding does it get? Where does that money come from? How does it compete with the existing massively powerful corporations? What incentives does the government entity have to compete? What happens if it goes bankrupt or is purchased? What happens to whatever capital was used to fund it?
It just seems like the government entity would need to actively engage with seeking profits or just existing to artificially lower costs. I don't think the majority of people would want the government to have a for-profit arm that exists to compete with businesses, and I don't think corporations would just play nice.
I'd say that USPS is the closest example of this, and it's a pretty good example of how things can go wrong as well. The active attack against the postal service to try to privatize it is terrible. It will do nothing but continue to isolate power to the ultra wealthy and make people's lives worse. For-profit corporations and the government just have (or ought to have) fundamentally different incentives to exist.
I'd be curious to know of any examples of this working well. I don't mean to be so antagonistic, I just am really struggling to understand how this could work in any way.
rsync · 21h ago
These are all fantastic and interesting questions and are exactly the same questions you would face if you expropriated the property of the businesses my parent proposed privatizing.
The issue is not how complicated and difficult such an endeavor is (and you rightly identify it as such).
The issue is, if we're going to do this heavy lifting anyway, might we do it in a way that doesn't involve theft ?
Jensson · 15h ago
> The issue is, if we're going to do this heavy lifting anyway, might we do it in a way that doesn't involve theft ?
Expropriation usually involves paying the owners so it isn't theft, its just the government buying out the stocks just like a private corporation would. Are you saying Elon musk stole twitter? That is the same thing.
Anyway, here since this is shared between countries its better to just regulate what these processors can do, like the EU does when they regulate how large payment processing fees can be etc. Since its used for international trade no single country can own it.
rsync · 9h ago
"Are you saying Elon musk stole twitter? That is the same thing."
It's not at all the same thing.
Twitter could have said no.
meowky · 6h ago
The problem: what if the government fails to provide a competitive entrant?
We must NOT expect the government to excel at anything. We must assume it is, and will always be, a mediocre follower of established playbooks. To ensure the government accomplishes X, we must stress in the playbook that X is mandated and cannot be compromised in any way.
You cannot mandate competitiveness.
CrackerNews · 22h ago
This goes back to the origin of cancel culture. Businesses hate risk, and here is a group presenting them with a perceived risk against their bottom line.
bilbo0s · 1d ago
They're not.
There's always the other, less visible but more lethal attack front..
the CFO whispering in the board's ear about chargebacks.
I think what we need to get a handle on is guys, or gals, telling their spouses, "Oh I have no idea what that charge is doing on our card!?!?!"
Of course it's going to be disputed. We need some method of attribution that is definitive. So that people can't go around doing that any longer.
Make no mistake, these companies are about money. Morality or no morality, if you take chargebacks reliably back in hand adult content would likely show itself to be more profitable than nearly every other segment of their business.
Would there still be a line? Absolutely. But it would be a line that nearly everyone would be in agreement with, and the line would exclude nowhere near the amount of content it does today.
resonious · 1d ago
Visa/Master collect higher fees from merchants with high chargeback rates, so I'm pretty sure the CFO is still happy. I agree with the fact that they are all about money, but don't see how they lose money on adult content. This still seems very suspicious to me.
thewebguyd · 1d ago
Yeah, maybe they say its because of chargebacks as PR speak, but payment processors already cover for that with higher fees & extra risk assessment fees for businesses with a higher rate of chargebacks. If they are losing money because of a higher rate of chargebacks from adult content, then they designed their fee structure poorly.
supertrope · 21h ago
Fee structures don't scale to infinity with chargeback risk. They cut off very high risk merchants. It's the same reason cloud providers need you to request GPUs instead of exponentially raising prices to absorb cryptocurrency fraud losses.
rchaud · 1d ago
Those companies go out of business faster too so dealing with them carries more risk.
gs17 · 23h ago
That would be a valid point, except something like Steam isn't going under anytime soon over chargebacks, and they could demand larger reserves if they're afraid of that.
ryandrake · 1d ago
I'd love to see this problem solved too, but let's not do it by nerfing people's ability to charge back. Chargeback is pretty much the only tool consumers have to fight a merchant's fraud and abuse against them, and it's already an opaque, flimsy tool. Also, it only exists by the grace of Visa, MasterCard and American Express. I don't think there is any law that compels them to even allow a customer to dispute a charge (although hopefully I'm wrong about that).
qball · 1d ago
>the CFO whispering in the board's ear about chargebacks.
Lies: these transactions don't get charged back at a higher rate.
Visa and Mastercard were getting pressure from New York officials to put firearm purchases into their own category, something that the gun control advocates say could help stop potential mass shooters by red flagging large gun purchases. The initiative was stopped by Republican politicians and other lobbyists.
Paypal IIRC also won't process payments for anything firearm related.
b8 · 1d ago
How did OnlyFans overcome this issue? They were pressured by a payment processor to stop allowing NSFW content, but reverse their decision. How did that pan out?
const_cast · 1d ago
I don't know exactly how they did it, but OF was/is unique in that the adult content is their entire business model.
When your company is at risk of being essentially forcefully dissolved, you're gonna be desperate. I was fully expecting them to tell Visa to fuck off and just switch to a different payment processor, because that's more economically viable than complying with Visa.
Maybe they threatened Visa with legal action and Visa felt that it was too risky, lest they lose their entire censorship operation. Just speculation.
scoofy · 22h ago
I guess the real question to me is why does/would Visa even want a censorship operation?
It makes no sense. They're a Fortune 500 company. They don't give a shit about the morality of nudie magazines.
rjh29 · 21h ago
From what I understand, porn has a higher rate of fraud. It's not about morality at all.
Jensson · 15h ago
But that doesn't apply to Steam.
robotnikman · 22h ago
I'm guessing shady back office deals with the executives took place, or at least I wouldn't be surprised if that was the case.
They previously were banned (or maybe it was threatened to be banned) by the payment processors, then suddenly it went away.
CrackerNews · 22h ago
I'm guessing they were willing to accept conditions such as verification of performers and censorship of unwanted adult content. OnlyFans has the scale to not be fatally affected by these costs of operation. They can present themselves as a cleaner alternative to an unregulated website.
ath3nd · 22h ago
It's easy: https://simplebeen.com/onlyfans-statistics/ OnlyFans is so big in the US and so widely used in the US (94 million active accounts) which is about 28% of the population (with the caveat that some people might have multiple accounts). It's too big to fail. The American economy will fail and the government needs to bail it and nationalize it as a public goods service. /s
It's either that or shady backroom deals with Visa.
slaw · 20h ago
Valve is also quite big. It is shady deals with Visa.
scirob · 1d ago
I hate to point out that we have completely free payment options (way too free for most) that could prevent all of this based on b***** technology. But then again maybe itch would get blackmailed even harder by the currently leading payment companies if they were to adopt b***** payments. So only with huge customer demand for free payments could they switch.
makeitdouble · 1d ago
> completely free payment options
I thought you were going for direct bank to bank operations.
I think these are currently the most practical and promising way to get out of the credit card duopoly's influence. It is more onerous on KYC check, but that sounds like a smaller price than a paid service just not existing at all.
ethbr1 · 1d ago
The issue with bank to bank is that consumers don’t have an intermediary willing to fight (read: chargeback) on their behalf, no?
I imagine few banks are staffed and teched to replicate payment processors’ anti-fraud systems.
makeitdouble · 23h ago
Customer protection isn't supposed to come from private third parties in the first place.
Look at it from this angle: why is VISA or Stripe the arbiter of disputes between you and Netflix ? If Netflix made you pay a fee that is not part of your contract or you didn't initiate, you should be able to retrieve that money without asking a racket business to cover you.
And while banks handle fraud issues, arguably they shouldn't be the one reading your contracts and deciding how to interpret it. Some customer agency or small claims court should be more fitting ?
Perhaps you're in a place where that just wouldn't work, fair enough, but the issue should be on why you don't have these laws or institution, not why there's no private middle-men fixing the deals.
ethbr1 · 15h ago
> Some customer agency or small claims court should be more fitting? Perhaps you're in a place where that just wouldn't work, fair enough, but the issue should be on why you don't have these laws or institution, not why there's no private middle-men fixing the deals.
In the US, this is effectively non-existent these days.
Best case, now rare, there isn’t an arbitration clause in the EULA, so you have individuals suing companies in small claims.
The problem there is scale.
A company can screw over a lot more people than people will spend time pushing back against a company. Because fundamentally, a company doesn’t give a shit about maintaining a relationship with an angry customer.
The benefit of using payment intermediaries to run arbitration is that the company does want to continue having a relationship with them and is therefore incentivized to care more about the case than they would otherwise.
Granted, there are a lot of ills from payment processors too! But waving a wand and suggesting bank to bank transfers alone fixes the issue is naive.
Sohcahtoa82 · 21h ago
> If Netflix made you pay a fee that is not part of your contract or you didn't initiate, you should be able to retrieve that money without asking a racket business to cover you.
Allowing customers to claw back money unilaterally opens the door for customers to make a purchase, receive the product, then fraudulently take their money back.
There needs to be a third party in the middle to determine if a chargeback is fraudulent. Chargeback fraud already exists, and what you're proposing makes the problem significantly worse.
makeitdouble · 18h ago
My phrasing was poor, I agree there should be a third party to handle the dispute, I just think it should not be a private business.
wallst07 · 23h ago
Because VISA has two customers, me and Netflix. They want that to continue so they are in a good place to be efficient arbirtrators.
Anyone else will be slow/inefficient (courts) or biased (Me or Netflix).
makeitdouble · 18h ago
> slow/inefficient
I find it interesting to want speed in deciding who should get screwed in a transaction.
There are economic advantages in people giving around their payment information, but the social impacts (the very existence of Visa/Mastercard and their influence on businesses or prices) aren't worth it IMHO.
IMHO people should be responsible of how they handle the keys to their money, and better tools should be given to secure and manage that, instead of a Big Brother like middlemen.
I mean, you don't pay cash at a restaurant with a string stuck to your money so you can pull it back three months after, because arguing with the restaurant feels too inefficient.
imtringued · 1d ago
This is an industry where chargebacks don't make sense. You either buy and pay or you don't and if you're on the fence, then don't. The only necessary intermediary is a trustworthy online shop/platform with a reasonable refund policy.
dartharva · 1d ago
The solution to that is requiring your PIN, 2FA and ML-powered suspicious transaction alerts for each transaction. It's actually not as cumbersome as it sounds and takes less than five seconds at its best; UPI in India has perfected it.
resonious · 1d ago
Another reason for chargebacks is fraudulent merchants. If somebody sells me a fake item, I highly doubt they are going to willingly refund me when I complain to them about it.
makeitdouble · 18h ago
That should either be handled by a court or customer protection action agency, or by your private insurance (basically like how it works with cash transactions)
Baking it into the payment processing warps the whole situation.
flatline · 1d ago
Crypto moves the problem from payment providers like Visa to central exchanges like Coinbase. Until you have a completely decentralized ecosystem built around crypto, you run into trouble when offramping to fiat. If I recall, backpage accepted bitcoin when Visa dropped them, but it was way too much hassle to be useful. If you could pay rent and utilities and buy food using some sufficiently decentralized token, crypto may become a viable alternative.
Lerc · 1d ago
The principle should be that it shifts the problem to payment providers who can be switched out for other payment providers seamlessly. The providers are motivated to behave ethically because you have the option of going elsewhere.
Paying with crypto is still not very usable but you can still do it directly which limits the degree of extortion that can be applied. I think it will get better as it ceases to be 'interesting' and people develop tools that just work rather than try to revolutionize your life.
rcxdude · 1d ago
crypto has well and truly poisoned its own well here, with the sheer number of scams and fraud on the various platforms. It's also hella expensive as a way to take payments, since you usually have 2x exchange fees as well as the network transaction fees on a payment.
WHA8m · 1d ago
But you CAN use Bitcoin without being scammed. It's just new (to common people) and there are new things to learn.
(I hate to defend the crypto space. I don't want the crypto bros to win. I really hope it doesn't come that far and it's the only option left...)
superkuh · 1d ago
Crypto didn't do that. Investment bros did. Pretty much everything created after 2015 is a scam and hardly related to cryptocurrency at all. Just traditional investment/scam types moving in and adopting the name/language for popularity.
But you're right about the outcome from this. Most people don't know the difference, were only exposed to the post-2015 scams, and just assume all cryptocurrency is a scam.
BoiledCabbage · 1d ago
> Crypto didn't do that. Investment bros did.
So why didn't crypto block or ban them from doing these scams using their technology?
Unless you're saying crypto created the problem at this scale and can do nothing to stop the problem it created...?
wallst07 · 23h ago
>So why didn't crypto block or ban
I think you have a misunderstanding of the technology.
bryanlarsen · 1d ago
UPI in India, Pix in Brazil, Interac in Canada, various iBAN schemes in Europe, WeChat and AliPay in China. Everywhere but the US has good options that aren't the credit card duopoly or the scam / crime filled bitcoin.
tavavex · 1d ago
These examples aren't quite apples-to-apples. Yes, I can e-transfer money to other people in Canada I know or even pay small businesses for their services. But that only applies to one country. When I buy something on Steam or Itch, I must send money abroad, and the same is true for countless other things. And what options do you have for that besides the Visa/MC duopoly or crypto? I'm not a crypto user, but I see it as the only realistic future way of moving money to buy anything that the holy payment processors deem icky, barring the near-zero chance of them being regulated in the US or a popular competitor suddenly appearing.
bryanlarsen · 1d ago
Steam collects GST so they've already figured that out.
But your basic thesis is correct, it's not apples-to-apples. Debit vs credit is a significant difference. Another major issue is that while the regulations for any one of the alternatives on my list aren't particularly onerous, I imagine the superset of all the regulations/contracts might well be.
tavavex · 21h ago
I'm not sure how exactly Steam pays local taxes, be it a Canadian third party that siphons the extra money for them or if they just send each region the tax money, but either way the money is flowing abroad at some point. Then there's individual transactions. If you need to internationally send someone money and the payment processors say no for any reason, you're largely SOL. I guess you can mail cash directly, while that still exists. But my point that you can basically only go either through Visa/MC or through crypto stands, even though I don't particularly love either.
bryanlarsen · 20h ago
Or international bank transfer, or postal money order, or Western Union, or several other unlikely mechanisms.
piperswe · 1d ago
SEPA allows for free, instant international transfers. Why can't we have something like SEPA that encompasses more than just Europe?
dartharva · 1d ago
Aren't they already collecting through local entities in the first place and then converting them to dollars? Also, Steam does support local card companies like RuPay in India.
reactordev · 1d ago
Those aren’t clearing houses, those are fintech services built on top of clearing houses. They still rely on credit card duopoly or ACH reconciliation between banking institutions. Don’t kid yourself.
dartharva · 1d ago
Not at all, UPI is literally just a platform for direct mobile bank-to-bank payments. No credit cards or duopolies involved, just a public-sector behemoth.
reactordev · 1d ago
UPI is just fast ACH. It’s still built on top of IMPS, which is regulated by RBI. India’s version of US Treasury. A more mobile and grass roots version of Plaid.
All it takes is for RBI to say “This kind of content isn’t allowed” and you’d have the same effect. Here in the US, we didn’t build an IMPS like system until way too late in the game.
imtringued · 1d ago
You wouldn't, because the business model and the incentives are different. If anything, free chargebacks make consumers careless and turn them into freeloaders.
0dayz · 1d ago
Using blockchain would come with other risks.
Such as different middlemen having their own agenda.
coffeebeqn · 1d ago
If you want a somewhat simple experience you still need to go through the exchanges which could also be coerced into censorship. I guess you can move the coins through multiple wallets but how many people want to jump through those hoops
roguecoder · 23h ago
They aren't free as in beer, which is part of the problem. (The other major part being that the people who build them are in love with deflation, which makes them extremely hard to use as a currency.)
wmf · 18h ago
Deflation has been fixed by stablecoins but a lot of other problems remain.
timeon · 1d ago
Or how about actually elected alternative: government regulating these payment providers not to do this? (At least in countries where elections have total cap for donors per party.)
tavavex · 1d ago
Both Visa and Mastercard are American companies. What do you think the likelihood is that the US in its current situation regulates them? As for other countries, I'm not even sure they have the leverage when faced with an 'essential' duopoly that everyone already relies on.
thewebguyd · 1d ago
> I'm not even sure they have the leverage when faced with an 'essential' duopoly that everyone already relies on.
The fact they are so essential should give the nations all the leverage - "Your service has become too important to the function of our nation, so we are nationalizing your company and making it a public service."
Time to stop being afraid of doing that - if a private company is THAT important to the continuing functioning of your society, then that company has lost their right to be a private for profit business and needs to be nationalized, at least partially to keep them in check and make sure they are following the laws of the nations they operate in.
We, as societies, should have never allowed any corporation to become more powerful than their governments.
newswasboring · 1d ago
why are you censoring bitcoin?
falcor84 · 1d ago
Oh, I thought it was a different b-word
WithinReason · 1d ago
it was
newswasboring · 1d ago
what is this skullduggery lol. just say it.
WithinReason · 1d ago
it was BLOCKCHAIN
baobabKoodaa · 1d ago
great. now i need a shower.
JohnBooty · 1d ago
By inserting themselves as moral arbiters
While this is effectively what is happening, and I agree with everything you said, I would like to add the primary reason why I've always heard that payment processors don't want to deal with adult content.
The primary reason is because adult content has a very high percentage of disputed charges.
Typically, it's because some person's partner notices some kind of porn on the credit card statement, and the purchaser claims they were "hacked" or something and then disputes the charge. This doesn't necessarily happen a large percentage of the time, but going from e.g. 0.1% disputes (or whatever the industry norm is) to 0.2% really torpedos profit margins.
There is also some skittishness about local laws regarding morality. Credit card payments cross a lot of boundaries and various localities have wildly differing laws about adult content and so the payment processors simply don't want to risk it.
I guess what I'm saying is: the payment processors seem like the symptom of a larger problem, not the root cause.
Source: I've never worked in payment processing, but I used to run an online business with spicy content, and had to navigate this to an extent.
dragonwriter · 1d ago
> The primary reason is because adult content has a very high percentage of disputed charges.
If that was the driving force, the payment processors would be reacting to the businesses on their own initiative from the dispute stats. But that is not what is happening, they are responding to public moral panic campaigns, which indicates that disputes are not the driving force.
echelon · 1d ago
> This doesn't necessarily happen a large percentage of the time, but going from e.g. 0.1% disputes (or whatever the industry norm is) to 0.2% really torpedos profit margins.
Then you charge an additional fee in exchange for the MCC risk. This is easy.
What we're really seeing is moral policing.
jfyi · 1d ago
It's not clear to me from the post what level this is happening on.
I assume by "payment processor" that they are not talking about Visa et al themselves but their merchant services provider.
The alternative to this is to find a merchant services company that specializes in adult industry. Something like https://ccbill.com/ which is going to end up costing you (or your customers) somewhere around 30% on all payments on your entire platform.
It's likely easier to strong arm these providers as they are typically pretty risk averse.
JohnBooty · 1d ago
Then you charge an additional fee in exchange for the MCC risk. This is easy.
Sure, yeah. There are niche payment processors who specialize in such things. They charge exorbitant rates, like 20-30+%. I suspect that itch.io may consider working with somebody like CCBill to allow payments for adult content, and use a "normal" processor for everything else. That is what I would do, or at least attempt to do.
What we're really seeing is moral policing.
Effectively, yes. It is a huge problem.
But I would hope that anybody bothered by the problem would also want to understand the root causes. It's a little bit more complex than credit card companies being a bunch of prudes who think you shouldn't be playing weirdo dating sims.
You have to understand the economics of the payment processing industry, at least in broad strokes. Then you can understand why mainstream processors stay away from adult content.
- Profits are obviously large, but margins on any individual transaction are miniscule
- Disputes and chargebacks involve humans, which blows away the basic economical model there. The cost of 15 minutes of labor from a human being wipes out the profit on the next zillion transactions
- Adult content, while a big business in absolute terms, is a tiny drop in the bucket overall for these companies. They do not want to devote a bunch of resources for something that is, overall, probably like 0.1% or less of their overall revenue
gs17 · 1d ago
> I suspect that itch.io may consider working with somebody like CCBill to allow payments for adult content, and use a "normal" processor for everything else. That is what I would do, or at least attempt to do.
Except AFAIK Visa/MasterCard are not okay with this. Because it's not actually about fraud or chargebacks.
> The cost of 15 minutes of labor from a human being wipes out the profit on the next zillion transactions
Chargeback fees are paid by the merchant for card-not-present transactions, regardless of outcome. It's not a real reason, regardless, since there'd be no point to go so fine-grained about what adult content is banned if all adult content has chargeback/fraud issues.
JohnBooty · 21h ago
OK. So you believe that the credit card industry really really really wants to be in the business of moral policing.
I, on the other hand, have experiences with payment processing for NSFW material, and based on these experiences my understanding is that the CC industry doesn't particularly want to be in the moral policing business, but avoids NSFW stuff because of legal and profitability concerns. However, as an outsider I admittedly have no direct insight into what actually happens inside the CC industry.
So my question to you is -- what are YOU basing your opinion on?
gs17 · 21h ago
Based on their behavior. Nothing they do makes sense otherwise.
> but avoids NSFW stuff because of legal and profitability concerns
This, for example. They weren't enforcing a law, and there's no "profitability" issue as they could simply make the fees and reserves higher. So they might say that's why, but it obviously isn't the case. If it were, they'd demand a lot more than a few random handfuls of games be removed, and would target a lot more than adult content. They also would be totally fine if you sell that content through another payment method, because it's not their liability or profit at stake. However, if they're trying to censor content that isn't to their liking, this behavior makes sense.
There was also a recent class action lawsuit by business owners against both Visa and Mastercard accusing them of anti-trust violations, that was settled for $5.5B.
It's not yet clear how seriously the Trump Administration will take the lawsuit against Visa. There is mounting evidence and sentiment that both of these companies are not just self-appointed censors, they're also criminal entities who use their market power to extort and abuse both their customers and partners. Now more than ever it's important to contact whoever represents you in the government and tell them that a settlement won't cut it and you've had enough of criminal enterprises dictating the future of both United States and world society. There simply aren't any other solutions to organized corrupt power at this scale, it's either hand the world over to a tyranny ruled by this growing form of organized corporate crime, or act through the public institutions that we as the People have endorsed to represent us.
ethbr1 · 1d ago
Taking one look at the FCC, Americans should be more worried about this administration’s willingness to leverage any government power into coerced private industry action favorable to them.
‘That DoJ action? Might go away if you just _____.’
ndkap · 5h ago
What I am surprised about the most is why do these payment processors care about these moral issues this much? They are a profit-making entity and money is money -- the more money you process, the more profit you get. What is the downside for allowing NSFW content be bought using their processor? Are the boards/CEOs of these companies puritans? Aren't they handing more credibility to these alternatives like Bitcoin Lightning or Monero with actions like these?
ilaksh · 23h ago
The solution is advanced cryptocurrency. Obviously. Almost no point in writing any comments on this site that use that word unfortunately.
__loam · 1d ago
One of the most concerning parts of this is that these are global companies. Regardless of local laws, these companies still wield enormous power. This is also a sovereignty and self determination issue.
bdcravens · 1d ago
This isn't new, payment processors have exercised this kind of control over online content as long as people have been charging for content on the Internet.
gloosx · 21h ago
This is a great commentary to think about for the people who believe bitcoin is a useless scam
zoklet-enjoyer · 1d ago
This is a perfect use case for crypto/stable coins
altairprime · 1d ago
If only they weren’t so intent on being untraceable, they could well have served that purpose by now. Sigh.
mvieira38 · 1d ago
Cash is "untraceable", are you sighing at that too?
wmf · 18h ago
Sounds like you'd love Taler. I haven't seen much adoption so far.
zoklet-enjoyer · 1d ago
Ethereum, Polygon, Base, etc are not untraceable. The only untraceable ones I can think of off the top of my head are Monero and Secret Network.
altairprime · 1d ago
I didn’t realize we knew who owned the Satoshi cold wallets! When did they figure that out, and how?
What definition of traceable are you using? I meant, to a specific person (miner) who wrote value into the system — which could also include a specific cash register or ATM that traded currency for coin, depending on whether it’s a postpaid or a prepaid Visa/MC that we’re comparing to, I suppose. They only charge a few percent extra overhead to issue relatively anonymous prepaid cards, which people either choose to pay or not, but the coin systems have traditionally been operated without the identifiable, lower-overhead, lower-risk tier of users that could have supported a viable postpaid network competitor. To the best of my understanding — am I wrong here? — all coin systems are exclusively unconcerned with the user’s identity other than their password, so their traceability is close to zero without a criminal investigation and wrench takeovers, which makes it adoption almost wholly unviable.
(US folks trying to convert coins to currency without paying taxes may differ, but that’s a relatively new regulatory push and has no particular impact on the majority of worldwide coin users.)
drdeca · 1d ago
Well, they are more traceable than cash.
I don’t think there should be an obligation that money be substantially more traceable than is provided by bills having unique IDs on them..
dminik · 1d ago
Bitcoin is only pseudonymous. Inside the network everything is public and traceable, but not personally identifiable.
Where you lose anonymity is with inflows and outflows to the real world. You may only be able to buy cryptocurrency from a KYC seller. Or your payment can be traced. Or you buy something from an already identified seller. Ironically, a lot of the anonymity of Bitcoin comes from the anonymity of physical cash.
If employers started paying out salaries using Bitcoin, it would suddenly be really easy to identify wallets.
wallst07 · 23h ago
What are you talking about and who is they?
imtringued · 1d ago
The thing about them being moral arbiters isn't even imagined. They have had plenty of time to figure out a business model that serves these specific markets without cutting them off altogether. Instead, the payment processors are always threatening to cut off all access even to content that does not infringe upon their terms if there is even a single violation by mistake that gets remediated quickly or the payment method is disabled for the high risk content to begin with.
surgical_fire · 1d ago
> By inserting themselves as moral arbiters for the digital economy and free expression on the internet, these processors are creating a very strong case for being designated as common carriers or being subjected to much stricter public utility regulation.
It's maddening that they are not common carriers at this point. In many ways it is very difficult - if not impossible - to operate in the world nowadays without access to payment infrastructure.
This should also come as a lesson to all the people that base their rationale in "government icky" moronic arguments. Corporations are all too happy to abuse consumers in the lack of proper regulations. While the government should not get blind faith, there are multiple avenues to scrutinize and question the government. Corporations on the other hand can and will fuck over everyone mercilessly without proper regulations.
Dracophoenix · 1d ago
> This should also come as a lesson to all the people that base their rationale in "government icky" moronic arguments. Corporations are all too happy to abuse consumers in the lack of proper regulations. While the government should not get blind faith, there are multiple avenues to scrutinize and question the government. Corporations on the other hand can and will fuck over everyone mercilessly without proper regulations.
Whoever said governments oppose this development? What makes you they're not ones holding the cards?
The links you sent have absolutely no relation to the case in point.
Your response is just baseless conjecture.
LearnYouALisp · 21h ago
How dare gubmint involve itself in auditing predatory lenders and weapons dealers
Krutonium · 1d ago
For those of you in the US (I'm Canadian), there is a bill in congress right now that would make it illegal for any financial service provider to directly or indirectly prohibit or inhibit any legal transaction. It's called the Fair Access to Banking Act, H.R.987 in the House, S.401 in the Senate. Call your representatives. Get it passed.
Edit: Oh yeah and feel free to copy, paste, share this around, make people AWARE of this, because nobody is! Of course, change if you're not Canadian, but like... Make it happen.
some_furry · 1d ago
I'm seeing mixed things about HR 987 and S 401 online. There are resistbot campaigns claiming that this law will do the exact opposite of what we want.
I don't see a basis for the assertion by the resistbot letter that it could "force banks to cut off services to" "marginalized communities". It actually appears to do the opposite - banks that cut off services to law-abiding people would lose their access to the Fed lending window.
rimunroe · 1d ago
I'm not a lawyer and wasn't familiar with the bill until it was brought up in this thread. Looking at the text of the bill I'd guess that it's because the bill specifically calls for making risk determination on an individual basis[1] rather than for broad categories. The worry would be that despite the bill calling for banks to make these determinations based on "quantitative, impartial risk-based standards", this would actually give them more leeway to discriminate in a much more targeted way.
This is a rather paranoid reading of the bill, and I don't think the clause you cite has the effect you describe. For one thing, it's in the "Findings" section, which is not operative statutory text - it's a statement of opinion to describe the authors' state of mind at the time the bill was written. Further, in the scenario you describe - a bank cutting off services after an individualized risk assessment - if the cut-off customer was in compliance with the law, 4(c) causes the bank to lose access to the Fed window, which is basically game over for them. Today, banks can cut off services for nearly any reason with little recourse. If the bill passes, banks will need to be extremely careful when cutting off services to individuals.
rimunroe · 2h ago
I appreciate the thorough response! Again, I'm not a lawyer or even very familiar with it. I looked up the concerns people had, and then tried to find the bit which seemed likely to cause that concern.
I don't know if it sounds likely, and you seem more familiar with this kinda thing than I am, but given the erosion of a bunch of norms I can understand why people would have much less trust in any sort of regulators actually verifying that banks were following the law or their ability to win a lawsuit. Do you know if this would allow private action?
I tried. My brain isn't very good at understanding the effects of law, only the literal and logical structure of its changes.
> I don't see a basis for the assertion by the resistbot letter that it could "force banks to cut off services to" "marginalized communities". It actually appears to do the opposite - banks that cut off services to law-abiding people would lose their access to the Fed lending window.
I'm inclined to agree, but I'm not a lawyer. I would be a rather awful one if I tried to become one.
perihelions · 1d ago
It's remarkable that these censors are hiding behind "feminism", as a framing to make their censoriousness seem more palatable, or progressive, or enlightened. Anyone familiar with literature (reading–not burning) might know the OG feminists defied laws and criminal arrests to publish obscene books.
Here's Margaret C. Anderson of "The Little Review", fined $100 and fingerprinted for flouting morality laws publishing Joyce's Ulysses in serialized form,
I suspect there is far more church backing behind this organisation than feminist.
wmf · 18h ago
There have been multiple waves and competing schools of feminism. OG feminism isn't relevant to what it means today.
perihelions · 8h ago
That this wave of modern feminists would arrest the 1920's feminists for moral crimes shows they are indeed very different.
baobabKoodaa · 1d ago
> Anyone familiar with literature (reading–not burning)
nice one
johndoh42 · 1d ago
Sadly that ban also hit three of our our games that help victims cope with trauma. :(
Please write to your representative:
Dear [Representative's Name],
I am writing to formally request an investigation into the activities of Collective Shout, an organization whose censorship-driven campaigns have caused measurable harm to artists, survivors, and vulnerable communities. Under the guise of protecting women and children, they have erased trauma narratives, suppressed creative expression, and bullied platforms into enacting broad, opaque bans. Their actions disproportionately affect marginalized voices and bypass democratic discourse in favor of ideological policing. There is growing concern that their influence is rooted more in religious moralism than evidence-based advocacy. I urge your office to examine their funding, methods, and societal impact with urgency and transparency.
Sincerely,
[Your Full Name]
[Your Address / Constituency]
orlp · 1d ago
This is useless. You can't stop Collective Shout (their campaign almost surely falls under First Amendment rights), and even if you could, 30 minutes later a new group pops up. Plus your message would fall completely on deaf ears for anyone who agrees with Collective Shout.
Bring attention to the fact that payment processors are acting as active censorship of legal content, rather than neutral infrastructure. Emphasize that if they can censor legal content, anything could be next, including but not limited to political donations of a specific party.
roguecoder · 23h ago
Collective Shout is a foreign organization attacking American companies. The First Amendment does not mean you get to speak and advocate in secret, and it only applies to American residents.
kelseyfrog · 23h ago
Not quite. The First Amendment applies to everyone within U.S. jurisdiction, not just residents or citizens.
The first, third, fourth, fifth, and ninth amendments have all been historically used to establish various rights of privacy.
That's not to say that one agrees with or disagrees with the outcome here, just that this argument isn't based in an understanding of the law.
OkayPhysicist · 22h ago
The first amendment doesn't "apply" the people, domestic or otherwise, at all. It applies to the government, and what it can't do.
kelseyfrog · 18h ago
Thanks. So the steelman version is, the first amendment applies to the government when they restrict rights of residents, not just citizens.
snvzz · 1d ago
While they also deserve some backlash, I would focus on bringing attention to the payment processors.
raincole · 18h ago
Uh, Visa/Mastercard chose to do that. We're talking about payment processors who process trillions of dollars every year. They won't just bend Steam over backwards to make an Australian NGO happy.
It's either that Visa/Mastercard always want to censor porn, or they're pressured by government(s) to do so.
kbelder · 15h ago
I think it may be that they don't care about porn, but will performatively censor it sometimes in order to forestall actual government legislative action.
efitz · 1d ago
Any corporation whose business is financial in nature and focused on facilitating commerce- banks, payment processors, and everything else- should be required to function as a common carrier. They should be allowed to alter prices to adjust for provable differences in risk, for example if transactions involving a particular seller or a particular class of product have a much larger than average dispute rate- but they should not be allowed to deplatform any customer for any reason not directly related to fraudulent or illegal behavior.
zavec · 1d ago
It reminds me of net neutrality.
betaby · 1d ago
Net neutrality exists defacto in US and Canada.
BobaFloutist · 23h ago
If we've learned anything from the current US administration, it's should be that defacto is only as stable as consensus is, and takes unacceptably little to subvert.
rf15 · 1d ago
It really does not, considering all the wiggle room ISPs and websites abuse.
betaby · 1d ago
Any example in US/Canada in the context of ISPs specifically?
Look, I like to rant about my ISP and their pricing, but I don't see where and how they violate net neutrality specifically.
wmf · 18h ago
It's kind of on the border but ISPs are extorting money from Netflix for no good reason.
betaby · 15h ago
Saying that ISPs are extorting money from Netflix is the same as saying ISPs are extorting money from its subscribers. Or toll roads are extorting money from drivers.
lioeters · 1d ago
Over 20K games, book, and other content have been removed with no warning to customers and creators. All because of pressure from Visa and Mastercard, a duopoly propped up by puritans and authoritarians.
Do you have any further reports on this ? All the news are just reporting the action by payment processor, not much on who is pressuring them to do so.
dlcarrier · 1d ago
It's difficult to track down threats, which is the primary means of jawboning, and courts often okay with them, despite the significant conflict with the first amendment. There are many cases of it becoming public though, showing how prevalent it is. It was the primary concern in the Twitter Files (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Twitter_Files) and in the Backpage.com, LLC v. Dart case, (https://law.justia.com/cases/federal/appellate-courts/ca7/15...) the Sheriff in Cook County Illinois tried to follow through with the threat, but was overturned by the courts, who tend to have a much stronger response to follow-through than threat itself, despite most of the effectiveness coming from threats.
Also, politicians are constantly threatening to revoke section 230 of the communications decency act, without which hosting any kind of user-generated content, from forums to video streaming to social media, would be effectively impossible in the US, because everything posted would need to be censored before ever being displayed.
Collective Shout is just the front and their purpose is to take the heat for this.
There is no chance in hell an organization like that wields anything close to the power required to force these kind of decisions.
Either it is the payment processors or the regulators, or a combination of both, or some other kind of group behind the scenes. Personally I don't know what the true answer is, but it's clearly not some activist organization.
dash2 · 1d ago
The last decade has many examples of activist organizations wielding huge power?
WorldMaker · 1d ago
It's not power, it's volume. Groups like Collective Shout are "squeaky wheels". They send enough letters/phone calls/emails to a payment processor, often via the company's legal team, often citing the processor's own terms and conditions, until the company caves from essentially peer pressure and takes all the whining and pushes it back onto their customers (vendors like Steam and Itch).
It doesn't take a lot of people/very big organization or a lot of money to do, just a willingness to be loud and obnoxious, but in a legal way.
It's the same thing with DMCA trolls that send takedown letters to demonetize things like YouTube channels. They don't need a lot of people/power/money, just a willingness to complain in volume and leave the evidence and fact finding to other people and/or automated systems like YouTube's auto-DMCA.
skitter · 1d ago
I do not see evidence that they are against violence against women and girls, only that they are claiming to be.
roguecoder · 23h ago
* claim to be against
This is about power, not preventing violence.
It is classic 1970s TERF stuff. Dworkin identified real problems, but her solutions are bad and make the actual problems worse by targeting already-targeted people for greater policing. What they do do is give suburbanite women the rush of power and control, building their own little evangelical theocracies.
popalchemist · 1d ago
And in turn they are ultimately being pressured by Evangelicals.
0xy · 1d ago
The pressure against Valve came from Collective Shout, a non-religious feminist NGO.
cardanome · 1d ago
> feminist
The founder of collective shout Melinda Tankard Reist is against abortions. They are also working with a lot of conservative organizations.
Sounds more like reactionaries in feminist clothing pretending to care about feminism for tactical reasons. Especially as their actions are hurting LGBTQ+ people.
It also the perfect storm to drive more people towards the right by "look those evil feminists are taking our games". Even though these people are not representative for progressive feminism.
ImJamal · 1d ago
Believe it or not, but not all feminists are progressive. Some think that women in porn is negative to all women. Same with abortion.
There is also no reason why feminism would need to support LGBT? The point of feminism should be to support women.
cardanome · 1d ago
> There is also no reason why feminism would need to support LGBT?
Because lesbian, trans and generally queer women exist?
Even if you were to only care about cis hetero women, it is silly to think that transphobes will only keep attacking trans women. As lot of cis women have been "transvestigated", have been harassed in bathrooms for "looking trans" and so on.
So even cis women will ultimately suffer if no one speaks up against bigots. The window of what they are allowed to wear, look like, how they are supposed to behave gets smaller and smaller.
The enemy is the same. The same patriarchal reactionary ideology that wants to punish any difference to the imagined norm. Ultimately it is a class war and the rich pricks are winning.
It is liking saying "why should I defend Jews, I am not a Jew.". Sure they might not come for you first but they will come for you eventually. United we are strong. Divided they will get us one by one.
If you are pretend to be feminist but throw your trans sister under the bus, you are a traitor not a feminist.
ImJamal · 1d ago
It is mostly the T that feminists have issues with, though the Ls have significantly higher rates of domestic abuse than any other relationships, so I could see some feminists having criticisms. A biological man going into a women's bathroom makes many (most?) biological women feel unsafe. Many feminists think that women feeling unsafe is not a good a thing and are fighting against it.
To call women who want to feel safe in a bathroom a traitor to feminism is just so ridiculous and is a betrayal of women. I haven't look at any stats, but from I have been seeing it appears like the so called trans-exclusionary feminists are growing regardless if you call them a traitor.
Wanting women to feel safe is such a basic tenant of feminism.
piperswe · 1d ago
I wouldn't be surprised if significantly more cis women were harassed by anti transgender "feminists" in womens' restrooms than harassed by actual transgender women in womens' restrooms. People worrying about whether other people belong in a specific restroom are the real safety risk.
Jensson · 15h ago
Issue is you can't tell the difference between a man calling himself a woman to harass women and a man calling himself a woman since he feel he is a woman. That is the main reason people are against these things, it doesn't matter if the "real trans people" are not an issue.
piperswe · 10h ago
Source for a "man calling himself a woman to harass women" actually going into women's restrooms to do that? I'm not aware of any substantial number of instances, especially compared to the instances I've seen of women being harassed by other women because of this line of thinking.
ImJamal · 21h ago
Perhaps, but it is the fear of a biological man is in their private space that is causing them to have friendly fire.
antifa · 5h ago
Interesting that they pick transpeople to have a phobia over, considering the fact is you're far more likely to be assaulted in the bathroom by a cis man, transvestigator, republican, Christian, or ICE agent than a transwoman.
ImJamal · 2h ago
I'm a little confused. There are already rules and laws banning a cisman from going into women's bathrooms. There isn't a law or rules at the location, in many states, stopping trans women from going into women's bathrooms.
Most cismen look like a stereotypical man. Some transwomen look like a stereotypical women which is what makes the situation harder to stop. You could theoretically put a guard at a bathroom and stop most cismen. You would only stop some transwomen.
> considering the fact is you're far more likely to be assaulted in the bathroom by a cis man, transvestigator, republican, Christian, or ICE agent than a transwoman.
Source?
kelseyfrog · 22h ago
What is a biological man? Man and woman are gender terms, not scientific terms. It makes as much sense as saying hexagonal anger. Clarify?
ImJamal · 21h ago
You know exactly what I am saying. Please don't try to play semantics.
kelseyfrog · 20h ago
Huh? It's a weird sounding term. No need to get hysterical.
Looking it up, it sounds like some kind of incel term?
ImJamal · 20h ago
You can't be serious? If you want to use the more modern terms then biological means cis as opposed to trans.
kelseyfrog · 19h ago
Sorry if I'm not getting it, but how can someone biologically be a gender? I get that someone can be a sex, but it's not clear how you see that working.
Jensson · 15h ago
To some people gender is basically sex. Simple as that. So a person can see themselves as a woman but others are free to see them as a man, because this isn't a scientific term as you say.
Its like how some call men who didn't conform to male norms "girlies" or so, these things are so ill defined that its dumb to argue over it. Of course it is rude to call something they don't wanna be called though.
ImJamal · 14h ago
I am talking about sexes and you know it. Please stop being so obtuse. Anybody old enough to be here have heard people using the phrase biological man.
kelseyfrog · 11h ago
You mean male? It sounds like you're trying to say someone who has an M on their birth certificate but the word "man" keeps coming out.
It's coming across as an idiosyncrasy. Presumably it's something you aware of?
ImJamal · 3h ago
I'm not going to continue this conversation unless you can actually get to whatever point you are trying to make. You know exactly what I am trying to say and are trying to play some sort of semantics game according to definitions that like 1% of people could get correct.
kelseyfrog · 1h ago
So it's not really about the wording itself, it's more that the phrase "biological man" is standing in for something you're not quite saying directly?
It kinda feels like you're using the term to push a specific idea, but you don't want to say that idea out loud. Which is fair, I guess. People do that all the time. It's just that, when asked to explain, it all starts to sound a little wobbly, like the logic doesn't hold up under even basic questions.
It's interesting though. Like, if the phrase only makes sense when nobody asks what it means, is it actually meaningful? Or is it just a way to say something without really owning it?
snvzz · 1d ago
The LGB and then LGBT and then LGBT++ thing is the result of a destructive, diluting strategy known as co-opting.
Something similar was attempted against atheism. ("Atheism+")
No comments yet
dekrg · 1d ago
Feminists and the far left have been complaining about attractive women in games and not enough inclusivity for the past 10 years and you think is some grand rightwing conspiracy?
Also if you think "real" feminists would be for adult games targeted at men you might be straight up delusional.
dwb · 1d ago
No-one has complained about “attractive women in games”, that is a mischaracterisation. “Attractive” is a subjective judgement anyway. People have complained about the predominance of women in video games adhering to a particular set of beauty standards, to the near exclusion of anyone else. It should be very uncontroversial to want a representative selection of people in games. And for the production companies, it makes obvious business sense.
dekrg · 1d ago
Really? No one for example complained about the attractive main character in Stellar Blade? And no complaints about how the characters look in Marvel Rivals?
That aside you can word it however you want "attractive", "unrealistic beauty standards", "sexualized", or even call it "not having enough representation" but everyone knows what you are actually talking about is getting rid of good looking women in video games and not giving players a choice of having a "representative selection".
As for it being purely a business decision by companies, how is Concord doing? The point being both men and women like having beautiful characters so say that it’s a business decision to have ugly characters is just not true.
dwb · 1d ago
> "attractive", "unrealistic beauty standards", "sexualized", or even call it "not having enough representation"
These all mean different things.
eska · 1d ago
I remember feminists complaining about Stellar Blade’s main character looking unrealistic. Then it turned out her body was scanned from a real actress. :-)
BobaFloutist · 23h ago
If you don't think real actors and actresses look unrealistic, you must live inside Hollywood.
tavavex · 1d ago
> No one for example complained about the attractive main character in Stellar Blade?
Actually no, not really. The whole outrage around Stellar Blade was largely manufactured, spurred from an right wing influencer's mischaracterization of a (retracted) line from IGN France. IGN France and its milquetoast quote represents all the 'insane leftists' that people loved to portray in that discourse as having started the attack on the game. All the drama that stemmed from there were simply the result of people digging their heels in - right-wing people taking up SB to be their perceived savior, the unapologetic disruptor that cuts through 'ugly Western designs', while left-wing people naturally put themselves on the other side, claiming that it's a mediocre game that right-wingers only like for the sex appeal, thereby feeding the cycle. But this wasn't started by the left, there was no initial outrage, all of this was just bait. But many people still see it from the perspective of the people who incited it.
And I mean, look around. Lots of games have attractive protagonists. How much outrage was there when NieR: Automata came out from 'the left'? Lots of games have extremely appealing designs, and the fact that no one seems to go against them and that they keep selling should tip you off that the perceived unanimity you're talking about is a niche and extreme opinion.
zimpenfish · 1d ago
> The whole outrage around Stellar Blade was largely manufactured
The always excellent Shaun did a deep dive[0] into the nonsense.
If all the characters in games were people that you couldn't relate to and that you don't feel represented by, you wouldn't like that, no? You would complain. Rightfully so.
So why are other people not allowed to also complain if they are not represented in games? Why is that bad?
This does not mean they want to ban certain games. It is often not even about pushing devs to create more diverse characters though that would be great but just to create awareness how certain beauty standards and ideas of normality are recreated and enforced in media.
Embracing that people are different is something that is good for everyone. There will always be a Stellar Blade but there could be also so much more.
dekrg · 1d ago
>If all the characters in games were people that you couldn't relate to and that you don't feel represented by, you wouldn't like that, no?
Games are a visual medium, like movies, which is why games with attractive characters are generally more popular, and just to be clear simple graphics like in Schedule I are not unattractive or ugly.
More importantly how a character looks has nothing to do with how relatable a character actually is - it an absurd premise. What you are basically saying is that people won't enjoy playing Stray because they are not cats, which obviously isn't true and doesn't make sense. It's the same in movies, when watching Wall-E people don't go "well I'm not a trash compactor so I can't relate at all".
>Embracing that people are different is something that is good for everyone.
And I would agree except that in reality it isn't include non-attractive looking characters along side attractive ones, it's always to exclude what you call "standard beauty standard".
As an example of this if would really is about just giving options to player then why is the breast slider in Dragonage Veilguard limited so that players can create only characters with small breasts? Where did the "representation", "inclusivity", "player choice" go to with regards to large breasts?
cardanome · 1d ago
> why is the breast slider in Dragonage Veilguard limited so that players can create only characters with small breasts
You have a game where you can wear different armor and clothing and you think the body shapes are restricted because of some grad woke conspiracy?
Ever thought about how you would make the armor look good with huge breasts? It would either clip, look silly stretched or you you have to make an extra big_boob version that would be an huge overhead. It is super normal that character creation in RPGs has some limits so that all equipment still fits you.
Also THAT is your problem? Are you for real? We are not even talking about the conventional western beauty standard anymore, that is just your very specific preference for huge boobs.
You might want to listen less to right-wing grifters that make up stories where there is nothing.
dekrg · 1d ago
> Also THAT is your problem? Are you for real?
No, are YOU for real? You thinks it's technical limitations that limit breast sizes and it's that assets would look stretcher? Or that the game engine couldn't handle big boobs assets?
An incase you haven't noticed character creation in games usually allows you create all kinds of weird looking characters without it somehow hitting those magical limits that somehow apply to breast sizes apparently.
The breasts slider was just an example of "representation" not being actual representation and you need take time out and reflect on why big breasts in video games make you upset.
bccdee · 22h ago
> Or that the game engine couldn't handle big boobs assets?
Given the choice between creating new "big boob" asset models for most of the many outfits in the game and simply capping breast size, it's hardly surprising that the developers chose the cheap, easy option.
Anyway, what alternative explanation are you proposing? Prudishness? The game has plenty of sex scenes, so it's not that.
> The breasts slider was just an example
Well it was a bad example. Dunno what to tell you.
dwb · 1d ago
No one has asked for a breast slider with an unrepresentatively low maximum.
dekrg · 1d ago
That so? And the activist that usually complain about beauty standards and not having enough representation were angry how "unrepresentative" that was and were complaining about it to Bioware?
I mean you can lie and say how no one has asked for it but the activist have complained about big breasted women in games for a long time usually under the guise of how it's sexualizing the women in games. And yes there have been straight up complaints about characters breasts being too large over the years usually when it's a non-western game.
dwb · 1d ago
People have complained about the predominance of women characters in games with unrepresentatively large breasts. You keep conflating things (including your own sexual preferences) and being imprecise to make arguments seem unreasonable when they’re not at all.
dekrg · 1d ago
So women with large breasts don't exist? Or should they not be represented in video games?
I'm also curious what is the appropriate size of breasts for women to have in video games and how you and others like you determined it. And of course, you also have such standards for male characters and complain about unrepresentatively good looking or buff male characters, right?
And this being about sexual preferences is just you blatantly projecting. What I'm doing is pointing out how all this talk "representation" and "inclusivity" has nothing to do with actual representation and is just a thinly veiled cover for censorship.
dwb · 1d ago
You need to read more carefully what I’ve written, I’ve never suggested that large-breasted women don’t exist or shouldn’t be represented, I talked about the trends and tendencies. I’ve been quite precise in what I’ve written. I’m also quite happy for men and all other genders and body types to see broader representation. I’m not for censorship, in general. There is a vein of conservative (self-described) feminists who are extremely anti-porn and so on; I’m not on their side. I am on the side of feminists who want to see a lot more balance in media, including video games - broadening options and horizons, not shutting anything down unless it’s truly hateful. I really can’t see anything wrong with that. It’s not “censorship” if it’s just you not getting exactly your preference all the time.
dekrg · 1d ago
I read your deflections of how it’s totally not the same political groups advocating for all these things and your thinly veiled personal attacks.
You speak of not wanting censorship and wanting there to be balance, but balance of what and how? Without actual measurements and quotas on game content there can be no balance and it’s just censorship to please the side which has the most political influence, for video games this is obviously the far-left right now.
If it’s not about censorship and about having choice, why are there complaints when existing games that have attractive character come to western market ?
ThrowawayR2 · 1d ago
I have never read any of the great Western novels of the past and thought to myself "That was amazing but it would have been so much more relatable if characters of my own ethnicity and my own attractiveness (or rather lack thereof) and my other identity characteristics were there." Not even once. It would be incredibly self-centered and immature to ask an author to cram in a self-insert of me into their world instead of letting them create their world as they envisioned it.
dartharva · 1d ago
What!? I literally don't relate to any or feel represented by any character I have ever played as in a video game, and I have played hundreds. Nobody does. If anyone actually told me they "feel represented" by a fictional videogame character I will seriously worry about their mental health.
popalchemist · 1d ago
I believe they are extremist in more ways than feminism, my understanding is that the founder is commonly regarded as a "conservative religious fundamentalist", so much so that there is a blurb about it on her wiki.
npteljes · 20h ago
Hardly will an org with 45k Facebook likes pressure payment processort to pressure Valve to delist games. This is not adding up, at all.
Propelloni · 1d ago
Great post, thank you for bringing it to my attention.
WHA8m · 1d ago
Sailing is already back. Interestingly for very legit reasons. Maybe it's another case of who they say are the common early adopters...
beefnugs · 10h ago
This should spark gradual movement to crypto or other payment processors. Lazyness wins again i guess
msgodel · 1d ago
Capital one/discover has their own network. So at least in the US it's not a duopoly.
Not that it's much of a help here.
deaddodo · 1d ago
Many nations have their own domestic card networks that exist from the pre-Visa/MC domination period.
A few major ones that come to mind are Russia, China, and Germany.
roguecoder · 23h ago
The Australian and English TERF movements reviving the worst parts of the 1970s "radical feminist" movement has been absolutely corrosive to liberal society. The anti-abortion stance of this group gives the game away: it is about prudishness and control, not the full and equal humanity of women.
We need to realize that these people are not representative: they have been radicalized on MumNet forums the same way the flat earthers got radicalized on YouTube. The problem is when we let a small groups of radicals set global public policy based on who can behave the most outrageously.
raincole · 1d ago
The big irony here is that we already have a widely applied age verification mechanism, which is... credit cards. In most countries minors can't apply for credit cards. Therefore in an ideal world, Steam/itch.io/etc should allow players to buy NSFW content if only they pay via credit cards.
But someone we live in an upside down reality where payment processors are the ones forcing stores to remove NSFW content.
progbits · 1d ago
I'm tired of few jerks trying to police everyone and this "toleration of intolerance".
We can fight back. Any legal and nonviolent response against the "collective shout" people is acceptable. Share your ideas.
If you run a platform and see any of them as users get rid of them. Delete their account, wipe their data, ban them. Don't deliver them pizza. Don't accept restaurant reservations in their name. They think they can police others, it goes both ways.
Realistic? At this point, no. But we should normalize this sort of response. Wannabe bullies should be scared of personal consequences.
orwin · 1d ago
The new code Hayes is exported to the world already, games are just another medium caught.
To be clear: i do think part of the complaint from the collective should be heard (CSAM have no place anywhere, and rape roleplaying should stay in bedrooms), but including incest or any non-violent fetish in the complaint seems weird and seems equating it to rape and child abuse, which it is not (it's a disturbing fetish to me, but _a lot_ of fetishes are disturbing to me, and i don't think anybody should ban them). My issue with it is that it is again a show of force by payment processors and i heavily dislike it.
breakingcups · 1d ago
I'm curious, why should rape roleplay stay in the bedroom but mass-murder or burtal torture in, say, GTA V is fine?
orwin · 1d ago
Thinking about it you're right, it's just a kink. I still think rape or torture as a main storyline is extremely weird, but that's not a reason to ban them unless an informed majority wants to. In any case, it shouldn't be the choice of payment processors.
roguecoder · 23h ago
Even if an informed majority wants to ban something, it should not be illegal without actual evidence of actual harm. And all legal enterprises should be able to access the infrastructure necessary to conduct business.
pengaru · 23h ago
> informed majority
Jigsy · 14h ago
> CSAM have no place anywhere
The fact that a drawing can be "CSAM" is ridiculous, frankly. Why shouldn't taboo be explored in fiction? (Manga, Visual Novels, etc.)
bob1029 · 1d ago
This seems like a compelling use case for cryptocurrencies or other tokenized/indirect value exchange schemes.
edflsafoiewq · 1d ago
How? If CC companies refuse to process any itch payments unless the content they object to is removed from the site, then crypto would have to become itch's sole payment option. That would probably kill the site.
OldfieldFund · 1d ago
I think OP assumes widespread adoption of cryptocurrencies, but cryptocurrencies are very impractical for regular use.
oneeyedpigeon · 1d ago
It's relative, though. As cash and cards become more impractical by the day, they will eventually be less practical than even crypto.
roguecoder · 23h ago
The work of processing a credit card transaction is 1/100000th the work of a blockchain transaction via proof of work. Credit card transactions can get enormously impractical and it will still be more practical than a purposefully-inefficient distributed database.
kinakomochidayo · 17h ago
Most of the stablecoins are on Ethereum, which is Proof of Stake, and the remaining is on centralized chains like Tron.
Gas fees on Ethereum L2s like Base cost $0.0016 to send USDC, and $0.00064 to send ETH.
wmf · 18h ago
Stablecoins don't use proof of work.
OldfieldFund · 4h ago
how are cards impractical?
kinakomochidayo · 1d ago
It’s very practical if it’s stablecoins
MrGinkgo · 23h ago
I'm not sure what a stablecoin is beyond what I can intuit from the name, but the fluctuating prices of crypto seems like a detriment. However, couldn't the prices of materials listed on itch just update live to reflect the value of whatever coin they settle on using?
kinakomochidayo · 17h ago
Stablecoins are tokens issued by a centralized issuer that is backed by fiat and /or US treasuries (especially for USD stablecoins). This would mean USDC by Circle, or USDT by Tether, but there are more stablecoins issued by others as well.
Itch could update the prices pegged to BTC or ETH, yes, but they'd either want to keep them, or liquidate them to USD, in which case there is risk of fluctuation between when the token is sent, and when it's liquidated.
OldfieldFund · 4h ago
So stablecoins are reinventing banks just with less regulation?
oneeyedpigeon · 1d ago
Having one payment option is better than none. There are three alternatives:
1. Regulate the payment processors. This would need widespread agreement and some kind of global initiative—possible, but sounds like a LOONG process.
2. Invent an open payment technology that isn't crypto. Probably the most desirable outcome, but another LOONG process.
3. Bow down to the payment processor mafia. Sadly, this is where we exist; I think it's the worst possible option. Imagine what else we may be prevented from buying in future. Cash is becoming harder and harder to spend in the real world. First, they came for our porn; why wouldn't they come for our food, eventually?
itake · 1d ago
Maybe USDC being public makes this a better time. I believe Steam tried to accept bitcoin, but the price fluctuations and slow transactions made it impossible for them to provide the level of service that set.
herbst · 1d ago
BTC or any crypto lost way less value (in fact only increased) where 1 USDT/C lost 20-25% of its value for the average European since trump began crashing the US.
Really no reason at all to hold or handle USD compared to nearly anything else right now :)
_imnothere · 1d ago
For your information, there's stable coin for EUR as well[1]
Also CHF and many other currencies have interesting stable coin projects. Or just hold on BTC/Eth/... directly :)
Applejinx · 1d ago
Do you not mean 'hodl'?
Applejinx · 1d ago
People seem to not mention the 'slow transactions' that often, but suddenly adding all the business formerly transacted with credit card companies by itch.io would probably wreck all of crypto immediately. Too much volume.
seszett · 1d ago
It seems to me as this is a compelling use case for regulation that prevents discrimination by payment processors.
I just looked up a few porn sites and they don't provide Mastercard/Visa payment but they just take the national payment processor of the few (EU) countries I checked.
baobabKoodaa · 1d ago
> I just looked up a few porn sites and they don't provide Mastercard/Visa payment but they just take the national payment processor of the few (EU) countries I checked.
What does this mean? "national payment processor"?
seszett · 1d ago
CB in France, Bancontact in Belgium, iDEAL in the Netherlands.
Those are all nationwide networks that allow online payments (online in this case, but they also handle most non-cash payments offline) inside these countries. I think most countries have such a network (under various legal forms, for example CB is a consortium but Bancontact is for-profit, while I think Interac in Canada is a non-profit, etc) but the US doesn't have an equivalent as far as I know.
roguecoder · 23h ago
America has FedPay, but it hasn't been widely implemented yet.
Zealotux · 1d ago
Hopefully this can accelerate the world being free of historical payment providers.
Jyaif · 1d ago
On one hand the republican are pushing for puritan values via Visa/Mastercard, on the other hand they are pushing for cryptos which will reduce their control.
[edit: perhaps this pushing for puritan values is actually a 9000 IQ move to promote crypto-backed stores]
roguecoder · 23h ago
Crypto is a way for them to avoid the anti-bribery, anti-financial-crimes laws that were passed over the last hundred years. They know most people won't use it ever, but the people doing bribes were already willing to go above and beyond to get what they wanted.
aussieguy1234 · 1d ago
Yes, this is a very good example of traditional payments systems failing.
They'll censor any content they disagree with.
Crypto can't be censored so easily.
chii · 1d ago
using a technological method to try solve a social problem is unlikely to really succeed.
Censorship is a social problem, and needs to be solved with social methods, such as enacting payment neutrality laws like net neutrality laws (hah, as if), or electricity neutrality laws etc.
Using crypto can temporarily bypass it, until it doesn't or you are stigmatized somehow under the law for it.
aussieguy1234 · 1d ago
In the end, the power of everyday people to control what the law wants to ban is limited.
In some countries, content in favor of certain minority groups is banned. For sure those groups ability to take payment is impacted.
Sometimes those minorities are denied citizenship and can't open a bank account e.g. the Rohingya in Myanmar.
charcircuit · 1d ago
I think you are underestimating the social dynamics of a centralized vs decentralized systems.
dartharva · 1d ago
... until cryptocurrencies get banned too for "only being used by deranged criminals"
coryfklein · 1d ago
When I was young there was a lot of fear that first-person shooter video games were leading to a rampant increase in youth violence.
This concern is virtually unheard of today, and I wouldn't be surprised to learn that they actually had a slight effect in the opposite direction: some of those youth getting trouble outside are now indoors playing harmless video games.
roguecoder · 23h ago
When it turned out video games measurably lower crime people suddenly got really quite about the social consequences of video games.
zero0529 · 1d ago
This also happened to steam a few days ago. They even changed their game policy stating that their payment processors determine the content allowed on steam.
Tiberium · 1d ago
That's true, but at least Steam did not hide NSFW games from search/recommendations (if you had mature content enabled), which Itch.io did without warning. And I assume that NSFW games likely represent a far higher % of revenue/user activity compared to normal games for Itch than for Steam.
Jackson__ · 1d ago
Mind you, the exact same situation steam faces right now, itch.io had been facing ~3 months ago. If the current state of itch.io is anything to go by, things are still likely to get worse for steam.
doublerabbit · 1d ago
While this rubs one the wrong way.
Steam has the power to fight if it needed to hold its ground while it adjusts its policy.
With itch, I doubt so. In one swell swoop itch would be in the water; immediately action required.
I am not saying it's the correct way but to save a ship from being sank, credit card stuff are normally merciless...
donatj · 1d ago
Can we disrupt payment processors already?
This is getting really old. We shouldn't be bound by the moral compass of payment processors on what we can use our own money for.
pull_my_finger · 21h ago
Never a bad time to plug GNU Taler[1]
>>> GNU Taler is a privacy-preserving payment system. Customers can stay anonymous, but merchants can not hide their income through payments with GNU Taler. This helps to avoid tax evasion and money laundering.
Pix did it in Brazil. FedNow could do it, but it would require anyone in government to know how technology works instead of how to collect campaign contributions from the companies they regulate.
For context, the game which led to this mass censorship is mainly about blackmailing/manipulating women into sex
superkuh · 1d ago
Yes, but it's a game. Unlike, say, Game of Thrones, a live action depiction of such actions (and worse!) with real human bodies. Broadcast to the entire world, a global phenomenon, and no issues with payment providers or morality. And GoT is hardly the only show depicting such topics. Why are less realistic video games a problem then?
For context, these games are sold under a NSFW tag with clear labels. And not tagged are games where you commit acts of assault, theft, murder, and arson against innocent civilians. Those are totally fine, apparently.
yugoslavia4ever · 1d ago
babies and bathwater spring to mind
0xy · 1d ago
Why does that justify censorship? The content is unquestionably legal.
chromehearts · 1d ago
It's sexual coercion - aka rape.
tmpxid2025 · 1d ago
Sexual coercion, if done in reality, is a horrible crime.
So is shooting someone, setting fire to houses, etc etc.
Games aren't reality, setting fire to a house in skyrim doesn't mean you've commit or are planning an arson and should be sent to prison.
I agree that somehow "rape in a game" feels different from "shooting someone in a game". Does it feel different because of the puritanical christian culture we've been brought up in, where cops murdering people with guns is normal and celebrated, but priests raping young boys is still mostly hidden? Is it because there's some fundamental difference between the two crimes? Is getting perverse sexual pleasure criminal, but having fun shooting people in grand theft auto is okay?
My opinion is that even though it feels different, it's fine. Consensual rape-play in the bedroom isn't my cup of tea, I won't do it, it gives me the ick, but people can do what they want. If those same people want to play rape games, well, it gives me the ick, but that's up to them, they and the game developers consent to this media existing, and it's fiction, just like rape-play in the bedroom is. The safe word is alt+f4
(throwaway account because obviously)
tmtvl · 1d ago
While I agree with you I do think that it should be noted that in the West rape happens a lot more often than shootings (even with the US throwing off the average) or arson. That being said, sexual assault isn't being brought up because of its prevalence but just for shock value.
swat535 · 1d ago
> It's sexual coercion - aka rape.
We also have murder and the most horrific things, including going around and shooting unarmed civilians in GTA in Video Games.
const_cast · 1d ago
Then I guess GTA is murder.
There's a difference between speech about a thing, and the actual thing. The former should be legal, the latter sometimes isn't.
I can make jobs about chopping people up all day. That doesn't mean I should get life in prison for murder.
oneeyedpigeon · 1d ago
Weird, because I can still buy Neil Strauss's The Game on Amazon.
tumsfestival · 21h ago
Rape of who? Pixels?
My god, those poor pixels are being sexually abused!
efilife · 1d ago
You have thousands of games where you murder people, brutally. Is it legal?
mrkramer · 1d ago
If I recall correctly it has been proven that violent games do not affect young adults in negative way unless they are already mentally disturbed. There are thousands of movies that depict killing and sexual violence and nobody talks about it anymore. I think just like Gabe Newell said that videos games are more powerful medium than movies because they give you control over your character and you can shape the story how you like. That's what is bothering those "human rights" warriors. They are against games because they are such a powerful art tool.
roguecoder · 23h ago
It's bothering evangelicals, not "human rights warriors". They want control and power.
snvzz · 1d ago
>It's sexual coercion - aka rape.
In fiction.
snvzz · 1d ago
How is this even relevant?
eska · 1d ago
Reading the comments it seems to me that people focus on disallowing visa to censor. I think the bigger issue is that nobody can create an alternative payment processor and do business with Steam/Itch, because visa will pressure Steam/Itch. So to me it’s a problem of monopoly not censorship.
qualeed · 1d ago
>it’s a problem of monopoly not censorship.
It is both. The monopoly (or duopoly) is what enables the demands for censorship.
Funes- · 1d ago
If there ever was a case to switch to crypto payments...
roguecoder · 23h ago
It really highlights how bad crypto is as a solution to what it claims that it can't be a solution here.
It is impractically slow, the user experience is too high a bar, it lacks meaningful consumer protections and it would not be able to handle the transaction volume. That it hasn't been able to address those problems in the last fifteen years calls the whole enterprise into question.
anon191928 · 7h ago
In early 2000s it was IMPOSIBLE for websites to handle millions of visits, except big ones like google and yahoo.
UX for websites was weak, mobile barely existed, https was not used, online payments were limited to certain websites, fraud was common and anyone with CC number could steal from your card.
Internet was not early and Crypto is now at that level. So think bigger and think about process.
BeFlatXIII · 1d ago
What incentives are there for payment processors to be anything other than utterly amoral money movers?
shlip · 1d ago
It looks like itch.io is partly down ? Is it in relation to this announcement ?
lwidvrizokdhai · 22h ago
I'm so tired of seeing this exact same thing happen to platform after platform. These puritans will never be satisfied.
snvzz · 17h ago
Don't get them wrong: It is about the power. They get a kick out of being able to impose upon others.
Forever miserable people who wish to make everyone else miserable as well.
No comments yet
mrkramer · 1d ago
Crypto FTW.
charcircuit · 1d ago
Why not allow JCB / crypto / other payment processors for such material instead of taking them down?
TheDong · 1d ago
Visa does not allow that. The rules are worded as "If the merchant has _any relation to_ adult content, banned", not "if the merchant accepts visa payment for adult content".
snvzz · 1d ago
It depends on the adult content.
Actual porn OK. Onlyfans OK.
But fiction, for some reason, is not.
nar001 · 1d ago
That's not true, Visa/Mastercard also pressured Onlyfans a few years ago, and Fansly just banned content recently because of them too, so they definitely also pressure them
aussieguy1234 · 1d ago
For those who think this is about just banning adult content, think again.
What's actually happening is any content disliked by certain billionaires is being flagged by payment providers under their influence.
When they see something they disagree with, they'll send an email to the CEO of Visa or MasterCard and action gets taken.
senectus1 · 1d ago
interesting claim.
I'm not saying I dont believe you, but do you have any form of evidence to back this claim?
This particular example is also porn but you can see how the same method could be used for anything else even remotely controversial.
mschuster91 · 1d ago
The problem is, Steam, Itch, Pornhub - they all had ample warnings and complaints about the kind of content they're hosting, but chose to forego introducing moderation in favor of continuing to make profit. Complaints about Pornhub went ignored for years, for example, until enough pressure built up.
And it's a similar same case for Facebook. The EU complained for years about anything from hate speech spread by the general public to outright propaganda campaigns, Facebook did nothing - but complained when the EU finally had enough and introduced the DSA.
freehorse · 1d ago
Pornhub hosted material featuring sex trafficked women for years without taking serious action. Other porn sites were doing the same.
I do not see how a game in steam or itch.io where everything is fictional is anywhere close to that or requiring such moderation. This is a totally different issue, in the same way that a game involving killing others is not the same as an actual video of somebody killing people. Shall we ban books featuring similar themes too?
IncandescentGas · 1d ago
The payment processors have been held criminally and civilly liable in court for processing payments for pornhub. I don't see how we can expect Visa/MC to not censor their customers, if we also intend to hold them criminally liable for the actions of their customers in such cases.
If Visa spends years in criminal court because a book store accepted a credit card payment for an illegal book, then yes, expect Visa to start placing limits on card processing for bookstores.
roguecoder · 23h ago
Do you have examples where there has been criminal or civil liability for a purely-fictional game?
patchymcnoodles · 1d ago
I agree only partially with you. Yes some problems were ignored for far too long, but these providers sometimes block stuff that is just adult content. And it is an issue, if a small amount of providers have so much power. Visa and Mastercard more or less have the entire market. Both US american as well, so not even an alternative from other countries.
And with Facebook: I mean yes theoretically it is good that the EU is trying to do something, I'm all up for it. But Facebook is in my opinion worse than it ever was and gets more worse every day.
itake · 1d ago
How would have applying moderation years ago enabled Itch and Steam to sell porn games today?
mschuster91 · 1d ago
Applying moderation and reacting to legitimate complaints in time would have prevented pressure from building up so massively that payment networks or politicians even have a leg to stand on.
It's one thing to have occasional issues with stuff slipping through the cracks, that happens. But it's a completely different thing to just not do anything for years. In the case of Steam, let's just take the recent Nazi scandal [1] - reports of users using blatant Nazi imagery and vocabulary date back almost a decade [2] and that's the oldest thing I could find in a minute of Googling, I 'member this being a thing even years before Trump's first presidency but honestly I can't be bothered to search for more old Nazi shit at 9 o'clock in the morning.
Had Steam done something about the Nazis back in 2017, I guarantee you that 2024 Bloomberg piece wouldn't ever have come into existence. That's seven years in which Steam did nothing to combat users using swastikas - stuff that could trivially be caught using machine learning, even back in the time.
> Applying moderation and reacting to legitimate complaints in time would have prevented pressure from building up so massively that payment networks or politicians even have a leg to stand on.
How would moderation help when the games that are being removed from the platforms are perfectly legal, and in compliance with the terms the platforms out on the creators?
The only problem with the games is that a highly influential group of people views them as immoral, and use them as a stepping stone towards achieving their broader goal of censoring all adult content.
The nazi thing may have brought a little bit more attention to Steam but I really can't imagine it was a big decisive factor instead of Steam's allowing of porn games and displaying them on the best selling lists with the adult options enabled
edwardbernays · 19h ago
Payment processors will refuse to service payments for fictional harm, but will happily help people support a fascist[1]. If we're going to censor things, we should at least censor the actual, out-and-out, self-admitted fascists. Icky games with fictionalized harm do not seem to result in real harm, yet we have a very recent history showing the harm of real-life fascism. What a strange standard!
so if this game is so horrible and indeed promotes rape etc - surely we (this shout collective specifically) can go after the actual creator(s), right?
otherwise indeed it's a lot of extra work & red tape for everyone else because of some ultimate dickheads, better to and bash them directly I'd say
of course still need to have checks and publishing rules etc
mvieira38 · 1d ago
Aaaaand this is why we need crypto, and with crypto I mean Monero
mkleczek · 1d ago
Yet another case for Bitcoin: permissionless, censorship resistant, peer-to-peer payment system.
I wonder if (when?) we reach a tipping point when people massively start using it. Censoring porn like this looks like a very strong incentive.
rat_a_tat_tat · 18h ago
[flagged]
tomhow · 3h ago
We've banned this account. Please don't engage in gender warfare on HN. It's not what HN is for and it destroys what it is for, and is against the guidelines. Further, don't register new accounts just to break the guidelines.
Payment processors have effectively become unelected censorship boards with the power to strangle entire categories of legal content by threatening to cut off the economic infrastructure that platforms depend on. The fact that a single advocacy campaign can pressure Visa/Mastercard/PayPal into forcing platforms to remove legal adult content should concern anyone who values free expression online.
The fundamental issue isn't whether you personally approve of adult games or specific content - it's that a handful of payment companies now wield veto power over what legal content can exist in the digital economy. This represents a massive concentration of censorial authority in the hands of unaccountable corporate entities that face no meaningful democratic oversight.
We've seen this pattern repeatedly: PayPal blocking VPN providers over "piracy concerns," Visa suspending payments to adult sites, and now this coordinated pressure campaign. Each time, legal content gets effectively banned not through legislation or courts, but through corporate policy decisions made behind closed doors.
By inserting themselves as moral arbiters for the digital economy and free expression on the internet, these processors are creating a very strong case for being designated as common carriers or being subjected to much stricter public utility regulation. When payment infrastructure becomes as essential as electricity or telephone service for participating in the digital economy, treating these companies as neutral utilities rather than editorial boards becomes not just reasonable but necessary.
And more: before those, there was also Wikileaks[0,1], SciHub[2], and Tor[3]—among other high-profile acts of authoritarian censorship. There's countless others if you search HN—hard to sort them out for the sheer volume.
[0] https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=1969048 ("PayPal Suspends WikiLeaks Account (nytimes.com)" (2010) — 74 comments)
[1] https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=4808975 ("EU Scolds Visa et al. For Killing WikiLeaks Donations, Initiates Regulation (falkvinge.net)" (2012) — 61 comments)
[2] https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=23645305 ("Blackballed by PayPal, Sci-Hub switches to Bitcoin (coindesk.com)" (2020) — 290 comments)
[3] https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=27371787 ("PayPal shuts down long-time Tor supporter (eff.org)") (2021) — 185 comments)
These groups like "Collective Shout" don't seem organic to me. Where do they find members? In churches? I'm pretty clued-in to the going on in various churches, nobody knows anything about Collective Shout. It just materialized out of thin air, with a slick website and loudly claiming responsibility for these bans. "Look at us! We did this! No need to look elsewhere!"
Let me put on my aluminum-foil hat for a minute... Could this all be social engineering by some government agency that wants to ban porn (not outright, but make porn sites go out of business) to increase the birth rate to avoid demographic collapse? Just asking questions here.
My answer to that has always been - if a "private company" is so important and critical to a nation or economy, like a payment processor, then that company has lost the right to be private and needs to be nationalized and become a public service. Had this argument all the time back in '08; if a company needs bailed out by the government or the nation/economy will collapse, its clearly too important to be a private for profit enterprise and should be nationalized and become a public service
Not everything needs, nor should be, a private enterprise for profit. Payment processors, utilities, etc. should just be public services, available to all equally and for all legal purposes.
A much milder, and more sensible, expression of your underlying sentiment is:
If an activity becomes this essential, the government should provide a competitive entrant in the same field.
Now the incumbent provider has competition, and there is a market participant tied to other incentives, etc.
No theft necessary.
I'd agree, although considering our nation's decline into an authoritarian state I wouldn't trust a government competitor to be any better about protecting artistic works from censorship. Project 2025 makes the administration's feelings on this topic pretty clear.
I'll admit I didn't even think of that, and yeah I'd agree that's a good solution worth pursuing in cases like this. I can think of many industries where we need to inject competition into the market.
It just seems like the government entity would need to actively engage with seeking profits or just existing to artificially lower costs. I don't think the majority of people would want the government to have a for-profit arm that exists to compete with businesses, and I don't think corporations would just play nice.
I'd say that USPS is the closest example of this, and it's a pretty good example of how things can go wrong as well. The active attack against the postal service to try to privatize it is terrible. It will do nothing but continue to isolate power to the ultra wealthy and make people's lives worse. For-profit corporations and the government just have (or ought to have) fundamentally different incentives to exist.
I'd be curious to know of any examples of this working well. I don't mean to be so antagonistic, I just am really struggling to understand how this could work in any way.
The issue is not how complicated and difficult such an endeavor is (and you rightly identify it as such).
The issue is, if we're going to do this heavy lifting anyway, might we do it in a way that doesn't involve theft ?
Expropriation usually involves paying the owners so it isn't theft, its just the government buying out the stocks just like a private corporation would. Are you saying Elon musk stole twitter? That is the same thing.
Anyway, here since this is shared between countries its better to just regulate what these processors can do, like the EU does when they regulate how large payment processing fees can be etc. Since its used for international trade no single country can own it.
It's not at all the same thing.
Twitter could have said no.
We must NOT expect the government to excel at anything. We must assume it is, and will always be, a mediocre follower of established playbooks. To ensure the government accomplishes X, we must stress in the playbook that X is mandated and cannot be compromised in any way.
You cannot mandate competitiveness.
There's always the other, less visible but more lethal attack front..
the CFO whispering in the board's ear about chargebacks.
I think what we need to get a handle on is guys, or gals, telling their spouses, "Oh I have no idea what that charge is doing on our card!?!?!"
Of course it's going to be disputed. We need some method of attribution that is definitive. So that people can't go around doing that any longer.
Make no mistake, these companies are about money. Morality or no morality, if you take chargebacks reliably back in hand adult content would likely show itself to be more profitable than nearly every other segment of their business.
Would there still be a line? Absolutely. But it would be a line that nearly everyone would be in agreement with, and the line would exclude nowhere near the amount of content it does today.
Lies: these transactions don't get charged back at a higher rate.
https://apnews.com/article/gun-violence-shootings-new-york-c...
Visa and Mastercard were getting pressure from New York officials to put firearm purchases into their own category, something that the gun control advocates say could help stop potential mass shooters by red flagging large gun purchases. The initiative was stopped by Republican politicians and other lobbyists.
https://apnews.com/article/mastercard-visa-guns-second-amend...
Paypal IIRC also won't process payments for anything firearm related.
When your company is at risk of being essentially forcefully dissolved, you're gonna be desperate. I was fully expecting them to tell Visa to fuck off and just switch to a different payment processor, because that's more economically viable than complying with Visa.
Maybe they threatened Visa with legal action and Visa felt that it was too risky, lest they lose their entire censorship operation. Just speculation.
It makes no sense. They're a Fortune 500 company. They don't give a shit about the morality of nudie magazines.
They previously were banned (or maybe it was threatened to be banned) by the payment processors, then suddenly it went away.
It's either that or shady backroom deals with Visa.
I thought you were going for direct bank to bank operations.
I think these are currently the most practical and promising way to get out of the credit card duopoly's influence. It is more onerous on KYC check, but that sounds like a smaller price than a paid service just not existing at all.
I imagine few banks are staffed and teched to replicate payment processors’ anti-fraud systems.
Look at it from this angle: why is VISA or Stripe the arbiter of disputes between you and Netflix ? If Netflix made you pay a fee that is not part of your contract or you didn't initiate, you should be able to retrieve that money without asking a racket business to cover you.
And while banks handle fraud issues, arguably they shouldn't be the one reading your contracts and deciding how to interpret it. Some customer agency or small claims court should be more fitting ?
Perhaps you're in a place where that just wouldn't work, fair enough, but the issue should be on why you don't have these laws or institution, not why there's no private middle-men fixing the deals.
In the US, this is effectively non-existent these days.
Best case, now rare, there isn’t an arbitration clause in the EULA, so you have individuals suing companies in small claims.
The problem there is scale.
A company can screw over a lot more people than people will spend time pushing back against a company. Because fundamentally, a company doesn’t give a shit about maintaining a relationship with an angry customer.
The benefit of using payment intermediaries to run arbitration is that the company does want to continue having a relationship with them and is therefore incentivized to care more about the case than they would otherwise.
Granted, there are a lot of ills from payment processors too! But waving a wand and suggesting bank to bank transfers alone fixes the issue is naive.
Allowing customers to claw back money unilaterally opens the door for customers to make a purchase, receive the product, then fraudulently take their money back.
There needs to be a third party in the middle to determine if a chargeback is fraudulent. Chargeback fraud already exists, and what you're proposing makes the problem significantly worse.
Anyone else will be slow/inefficient (courts) or biased (Me or Netflix).
I find it interesting to want speed in deciding who should get screwed in a transaction.
There are economic advantages in people giving around their payment information, but the social impacts (the very existence of Visa/Mastercard and their influence on businesses or prices) aren't worth it IMHO.
IMHO people should be responsible of how they handle the keys to their money, and better tools should be given to secure and manage that, instead of a Big Brother like middlemen.
I mean, you don't pay cash at a restaurant with a string stuck to your money so you can pull it back three months after, because arguing with the restaurant feels too inefficient.
Baking it into the payment processing warps the whole situation.
Paying with crypto is still not very usable but you can still do it directly which limits the degree of extortion that can be applied. I think it will get better as it ceases to be 'interesting' and people develop tools that just work rather than try to revolutionize your life.
(I hate to defend the crypto space. I don't want the crypto bros to win. I really hope it doesn't come that far and it's the only option left...)
But you're right about the outcome from this. Most people don't know the difference, were only exposed to the post-2015 scams, and just assume all cryptocurrency is a scam.
So why didn't crypto block or ban them from doing these scams using their technology?
Unless you're saying crypto created the problem at this scale and can do nothing to stop the problem it created...?
I think you have a misunderstanding of the technology.
But your basic thesis is correct, it's not apples-to-apples. Debit vs credit is a significant difference. Another major issue is that while the regulations for any one of the alternatives on my list aren't particularly onerous, I imagine the superset of all the regulations/contracts might well be.
All it takes is for RBI to say “This kind of content isn’t allowed” and you’d have the same effect. Here in the US, we didn’t build an IMPS like system until way too late in the game.
Such as different middlemen having their own agenda.
The fact they are so essential should give the nations all the leverage - "Your service has become too important to the function of our nation, so we are nationalizing your company and making it a public service."
Time to stop being afraid of doing that - if a private company is THAT important to the continuing functioning of your society, then that company has lost their right to be a private for profit business and needs to be nationalized, at least partially to keep them in check and make sure they are following the laws of the nations they operate in.
We, as societies, should have never allowed any corporation to become more powerful than their governments.
The primary reason is because adult content has a very high percentage of disputed charges.
Typically, it's because some person's partner notices some kind of porn on the credit card statement, and the purchaser claims they were "hacked" or something and then disputes the charge. This doesn't necessarily happen a large percentage of the time, but going from e.g. 0.1% disputes (or whatever the industry norm is) to 0.2% really torpedos profit margins.
There is also some skittishness about local laws regarding morality. Credit card payments cross a lot of boundaries and various localities have wildly differing laws about adult content and so the payment processors simply don't want to risk it.
I guess what I'm saying is: the payment processors seem like the symptom of a larger problem, not the root cause.
Source: I've never worked in payment processing, but I used to run an online business with spicy content, and had to navigate this to an extent.
If that was the driving force, the payment processors would be reacting to the businesses on their own initiative from the dispute stats. But that is not what is happening, they are responding to public moral panic campaigns, which indicates that disputes are not the driving force.
Then you charge an additional fee in exchange for the MCC risk. This is easy.
What we're really seeing is moral policing.
I assume by "payment processor" that they are not talking about Visa et al themselves but their merchant services provider.
The alternative to this is to find a merchant services company that specializes in adult industry. Something like https://ccbill.com/ which is going to end up costing you (or your customers) somewhere around 30% on all payments on your entire platform.
It's likely easier to strong arm these providers as they are typically pretty risk averse.
Sure, yeah. There are niche payment processors who specialize in such things. They charge exorbitant rates, like 20-30+%. I suspect that itch.io may consider working with somebody like CCBill to allow payments for adult content, and use a "normal" processor for everything else. That is what I would do, or at least attempt to do.
Effectively, yes. It is a huge problem.But I would hope that anybody bothered by the problem would also want to understand the root causes. It's a little bit more complex than credit card companies being a bunch of prudes who think you shouldn't be playing weirdo dating sims.
You have to understand the economics of the payment processing industry, at least in broad strokes. Then you can understand why mainstream processors stay away from adult content.
- Profits are obviously large, but margins on any individual transaction are miniscule
- Disputes and chargebacks involve humans, which blows away the basic economical model there. The cost of 15 minutes of labor from a human being wipes out the profit on the next zillion transactions
- Adult content, while a big business in absolute terms, is a tiny drop in the bucket overall for these companies. They do not want to devote a bunch of resources for something that is, overall, probably like 0.1% or less of their overall revenue
Except AFAIK Visa/MasterCard are not okay with this. Because it's not actually about fraud or chargebacks.
> The cost of 15 minutes of labor from a human being wipes out the profit on the next zillion transactions
Chargeback fees are paid by the merchant for card-not-present transactions, regardless of outcome. It's not a real reason, regardless, since there'd be no point to go so fine-grained about what adult content is banned if all adult content has chargeback/fraud issues.
I, on the other hand, have experiences with payment processing for NSFW material, and based on these experiences my understanding is that the CC industry doesn't particularly want to be in the moral policing business, but avoids NSFW stuff because of legal and profitability concerns. However, as an outsider I admittedly have no direct insight into what actually happens inside the CC industry.
So my question to you is -- what are YOU basing your opinion on?
> but avoids NSFW stuff because of legal and profitability concerns
This, for example. They weren't enforcing a law, and there's no "profitability" issue as they could simply make the fees and reserves higher. So they might say that's why, but it obviously isn't the case. If it were, they'd demand a lot more than a few random handfuls of games be removed, and would target a lot more than adult content. They also would be totally fine if you sell that content through another payment method, because it's not their liability or profit at stake. However, if they're trying to censor content that isn't to their liking, this behavior makes sense.
There was also a recent class action lawsuit by business owners against both Visa and Mastercard accusing them of anti-trust violations, that was settled for $5.5B.
It's not yet clear how seriously the Trump Administration will take the lawsuit against Visa. There is mounting evidence and sentiment that both of these companies are not just self-appointed censors, they're also criminal entities who use their market power to extort and abuse both their customers and partners. Now more than ever it's important to contact whoever represents you in the government and tell them that a settlement won't cut it and you've had enough of criminal enterprises dictating the future of both United States and world society. There simply aren't any other solutions to organized corrupt power at this scale, it's either hand the world over to a tyranny ruled by this growing form of organized corporate crime, or act through the public institutions that we as the People have endorsed to represent us.
‘That DoJ action? Might go away if you just _____.’
What definition of traceable are you using? I meant, to a specific person (miner) who wrote value into the system — which could also include a specific cash register or ATM that traded currency for coin, depending on whether it’s a postpaid or a prepaid Visa/MC that we’re comparing to, I suppose. They only charge a few percent extra overhead to issue relatively anonymous prepaid cards, which people either choose to pay or not, but the coin systems have traditionally been operated without the identifiable, lower-overhead, lower-risk tier of users that could have supported a viable postpaid network competitor. To the best of my understanding — am I wrong here? — all coin systems are exclusively unconcerned with the user’s identity other than their password, so their traceability is close to zero without a criminal investigation and wrench takeovers, which makes it adoption almost wholly unviable.
(US folks trying to convert coins to currency without paying taxes may differ, but that’s a relatively new regulatory push and has no particular impact on the majority of worldwide coin users.)
I don’t think there should be an obligation that money be substantially more traceable than is provided by bills having unique IDs on them..
Where you lose anonymity is with inflows and outflows to the real world. You may only be able to buy cryptocurrency from a KYC seller. Or your payment can be traced. Or you buy something from an already identified seller. Ironically, a lot of the anonymity of Bitcoin comes from the anonymity of physical cash.
If employers started paying out salaries using Bitcoin, it would suddenly be really easy to identify wallets.
It's maddening that they are not common carriers at this point. In many ways it is very difficult - if not impossible - to operate in the world nowadays without access to payment infrastructure.
This should also come as a lesson to all the people that base their rationale in "government icky" moronic arguments. Corporations are all too happy to abuse consumers in the lack of proper regulations. While the government should not get blind faith, there are multiple avenues to scrutinize and question the government. Corporations on the other hand can and will fuck over everyone mercilessly without proper regulations.
Whoever said governments oppose this development? What makes you they're not ones holding the cards?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Operation_Choke_Point
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moral_Suasion#Jawboning
Your response is just baseless conjecture.
Edit: Oh yeah and feel free to copy, paste, share this around, make people AWARE of this, because nobody is! Of course, change if you're not Canadian, but like... Make it happen.
https://resist.bot/letters/eb93c1f2-0b25-4fb3-b080-5e75f9c5c...
EDIT: I decided to blog about this topic. https://soatok.blog/2025/07/24/against-the-censorship-of-adu...
https://www.congress.gov/bill/119th-congress/house-bill/987/...
https://www.congress.gov/bill/119th-congress/senate-bill/401...
I don't see a basis for the assertion by the resistbot letter that it could "force banks to cut off services to" "marginalized communities". It actually appears to do the opposite - banks that cut off services to law-abiding people would lose their access to the Fed lending window.
[1] §2.10 https://www.congress.gov/bill/119th-congress/senate-bill/401...
I don't know if it sounds likely, and you seem more familiar with this kinda thing than I am, but given the erosion of a bunch of norms I can understand why people would have much less trust in any sort of regulators actually verifying that banks were following the law or their ability to win a lawsuit. Do you know if this would allow private action?
Yes - Sec. 8(c) establishes the right of a debanked person to take civil action (and recover attorney's fees) against the offending bank. https://www.congress.gov/bill/119th-congress/house-bill/987/...
I tried. My brain isn't very good at understanding the effects of law, only the literal and logical structure of its changes.
> I don't see a basis for the assertion by the resistbot letter that it could "force banks to cut off services to" "marginalized communities". It actually appears to do the opposite - banks that cut off services to law-abiding people would lose their access to the Fed lending window.
I'm inclined to agree, but I'm not a lawyer. I would be a rather awful one if I tried to become one.
Here's Margaret C. Anderson of "The Little Review", fined $100 and fingerprinted for flouting morality laws publishing Joyce's Ulysses in serialized form,
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Margaret_C._Anderson
(Did you know the US Post Office used to burn books?)
I suspect there is far more church backing behind this organisation than feminist.
nice one
Please write to your representative:
Dear [Representative's Name],
I am writing to formally request an investigation into the activities of Collective Shout, an organization whose censorship-driven campaigns have caused measurable harm to artists, survivors, and vulnerable communities. Under the guise of protecting women and children, they have erased trauma narratives, suppressed creative expression, and bullied platforms into enacting broad, opaque bans. Their actions disproportionately affect marginalized voices and bypass democratic discourse in favor of ideological policing. There is growing concern that their influence is rooted more in religious moralism than evidence-based advocacy. I urge your office to examine their funding, methods, and societal impact with urgency and transparency.
Sincerely, [Your Full Name] [Your Address / Constituency]
Bring attention to the fact that payment processors are acting as active censorship of legal content, rather than neutral infrastructure. Emphasize that if they can censor legal content, anything could be next, including but not limited to political donations of a specific party.
The first, third, fourth, fifth, and ninth amendments have all been historically used to establish various rights of privacy.
That's not to say that one agrees with or disagrees with the outcome here, just that this argument isn't based in an understanding of the law.
It's either that Visa/Mastercard always want to censor porn, or they're pressured by government(s) to do so.
Also, politicians are constantly threatening to revoke section 230 of the communications decency act, without which hosting any kind of user-generated content, from forums to video streaming to social media, would be effectively impossible in the US, because everything posted would need to be censored before ever being displayed.
There is no chance in hell an organization like that wields anything close to the power required to force these kind of decisions.
Either it is the payment processors or the regulators, or a combination of both, or some other kind of group behind the scenes. Personally I don't know what the true answer is, but it's clearly not some activist organization.
It doesn't take a lot of people/very big organization or a lot of money to do, just a willingness to be loud and obnoxious, but in a legal way.
It's the same thing with DMCA trolls that send takedown letters to demonetize things like YouTube channels. They don't need a lot of people/power/money, just a willingness to complain in volume and leave the evidence and fact finding to other people and/or automated systems like YouTube's auto-DMCA.
This is about power, not preventing violence.
It is classic 1970s TERF stuff. Dworkin identified real problems, but her solutions are bad and make the actual problems worse by targeting already-targeted people for greater policing. What they do do is give suburbanite women the rush of power and control, building their own little evangelical theocracies.
The founder of collective shout Melinda Tankard Reist is against abortions. They are also working with a lot of conservative organizations.
Sounds more like reactionaries in feminist clothing pretending to care about feminism for tactical reasons. Especially as their actions are hurting LGBTQ+ people.
It also the perfect storm to drive more people towards the right by "look those evil feminists are taking our games". Even though these people are not representative for progressive feminism.
There is also no reason why feminism would need to support LGBT? The point of feminism should be to support women.
Because lesbian, trans and generally queer women exist?
Even if you were to only care about cis hetero women, it is silly to think that transphobes will only keep attacking trans women. As lot of cis women have been "transvestigated", have been harassed in bathrooms for "looking trans" and so on.
So even cis women will ultimately suffer if no one speaks up against bigots. The window of what they are allowed to wear, look like, how they are supposed to behave gets smaller and smaller.
The enemy is the same. The same patriarchal reactionary ideology that wants to punish any difference to the imagined norm. Ultimately it is a class war and the rich pricks are winning.
It is liking saying "why should I defend Jews, I am not a Jew.". Sure they might not come for you first but they will come for you eventually. United we are strong. Divided they will get us one by one.
If you are pretend to be feminist but throw your trans sister under the bus, you are a traitor not a feminist.
To call women who want to feel safe in a bathroom a traitor to feminism is just so ridiculous and is a betrayal of women. I haven't look at any stats, but from I have been seeing it appears like the so called trans-exclusionary feminists are growing regardless if you call them a traitor.
Wanting women to feel safe is such a basic tenant of feminism.
Most cismen look like a stereotypical man. Some transwomen look like a stereotypical women which is what makes the situation harder to stop. You could theoretically put a guard at a bathroom and stop most cismen. You would only stop some transwomen.
> considering the fact is you're far more likely to be assaulted in the bathroom by a cis man, transvestigator, republican, Christian, or ICE agent than a transwoman.
Source?
Looking it up, it sounds like some kind of incel term?
Its like how some call men who didn't conform to male norms "girlies" or so, these things are so ill defined that its dumb to argue over it. Of course it is rude to call something they don't wanna be called though.
It's coming across as an idiosyncrasy. Presumably it's something you aware of?
It kinda feels like you're using the term to push a specific idea, but you don't want to say that idea out loud. Which is fair, I guess. People do that all the time. It's just that, when asked to explain, it all starts to sound a little wobbly, like the logic doesn't hold up under even basic questions.
It's interesting though. Like, if the phrase only makes sense when nobody asks what it means, is it actually meaningful? Or is it just a way to say something without really owning it?
Something similar was attempted against atheism. ("Atheism+")
No comments yet
Also if you think "real" feminists would be for adult games targeted at men you might be straight up delusional.
That aside you can word it however you want "attractive", "unrealistic beauty standards", "sexualized", or even call it "not having enough representation" but everyone knows what you are actually talking about is getting rid of good looking women in video games and not giving players a choice of having a "representative selection".
As for it being purely a business decision by companies, how is Concord doing? The point being both men and women like having beautiful characters so say that it’s a business decision to have ugly characters is just not true.
These all mean different things.
Actually no, not really. The whole outrage around Stellar Blade was largely manufactured, spurred from an right wing influencer's mischaracterization of a (retracted) line from IGN France. IGN France and its milquetoast quote represents all the 'insane leftists' that people loved to portray in that discourse as having started the attack on the game. All the drama that stemmed from there were simply the result of people digging their heels in - right-wing people taking up SB to be their perceived savior, the unapologetic disruptor that cuts through 'ugly Western designs', while left-wing people naturally put themselves on the other side, claiming that it's a mediocre game that right-wingers only like for the sex appeal, thereby feeding the cycle. But this wasn't started by the left, there was no initial outrage, all of this was just bait. But many people still see it from the perspective of the people who incited it.
And I mean, look around. Lots of games have attractive protagonists. How much outrage was there when NieR: Automata came out from 'the left'? Lots of games have extremely appealing designs, and the fact that no one seems to go against them and that they keep selling should tip you off that the perceived unanimity you're talking about is a niche and extreme opinion.
The always excellent Shaun did a deep dive[0] into the nonsense.
[0] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WPsSguYNHpk
So why are other people not allowed to also complain if they are not represented in games? Why is that bad?
This does not mean they want to ban certain games. It is often not even about pushing devs to create more diverse characters though that would be great but just to create awareness how certain beauty standards and ideas of normality are recreated and enforced in media.
Embracing that people are different is something that is good for everyone. There will always be a Stellar Blade but there could be also so much more.
Games are a visual medium, like movies, which is why games with attractive characters are generally more popular, and just to be clear simple graphics like in Schedule I are not unattractive or ugly.
More importantly how a character looks has nothing to do with how relatable a character actually is - it an absurd premise. What you are basically saying is that people won't enjoy playing Stray because they are not cats, which obviously isn't true and doesn't make sense. It's the same in movies, when watching Wall-E people don't go "well I'm not a trash compactor so I can't relate at all".
>Embracing that people are different is something that is good for everyone.
And I would agree except that in reality it isn't include non-attractive looking characters along side attractive ones, it's always to exclude what you call "standard beauty standard".
As an example of this if would really is about just giving options to player then why is the breast slider in Dragonage Veilguard limited so that players can create only characters with small breasts? Where did the "representation", "inclusivity", "player choice" go to with regards to large breasts?
You have a game where you can wear different armor and clothing and you think the body shapes are restricted because of some grad woke conspiracy?
Ever thought about how you would make the armor look good with huge breasts? It would either clip, look silly stretched or you you have to make an extra big_boob version that would be an huge overhead. It is super normal that character creation in RPGs has some limits so that all equipment still fits you.
Also THAT is your problem? Are you for real? We are not even talking about the conventional western beauty standard anymore, that is just your very specific preference for huge boobs.
You might want to listen less to right-wing grifters that make up stories where there is nothing.
No, are YOU for real? You thinks it's technical limitations that limit breast sizes and it's that assets would look stretcher? Or that the game engine couldn't handle big boobs assets? An incase you haven't noticed character creation in games usually allows you create all kinds of weird looking characters without it somehow hitting those magical limits that somehow apply to breast sizes apparently.
The breasts slider was just an example of "representation" not being actual representation and you need take time out and reflect on why big breasts in video games make you upset.
Given the choice between creating new "big boob" asset models for most of the many outfits in the game and simply capping breast size, it's hardly surprising that the developers chose the cheap, easy option.
Anyway, what alternative explanation are you proposing? Prudishness? The game has plenty of sex scenes, so it's not that.
> The breasts slider was just an example
Well it was a bad example. Dunno what to tell you.
I mean you can lie and say how no one has asked for it but the activist have complained about big breasted women in games for a long time usually under the guise of how it's sexualizing the women in games. And yes there have been straight up complaints about characters breasts being too large over the years usually when it's a non-western game.
And this being about sexual preferences is just you blatantly projecting. What I'm doing is pointing out how all this talk "representation" and "inclusivity" has nothing to do with actual representation and is just a thinly veiled cover for censorship.
You speak of not wanting censorship and wanting there to be balance, but balance of what and how? Without actual measurements and quotas on game content there can be no balance and it’s just censorship to please the side which has the most political influence, for video games this is obviously the far-left right now.
If it’s not about censorship and about having choice, why are there complaints when existing games that have attractive character come to western market ?
Not that it's much of a help here.
A few major ones that come to mind are Russia, China, and Germany.
We need to realize that these people are not representative: they have been radicalized on MumNet forums the same way the flat earthers got radicalized on YouTube. The problem is when we let a small groups of radicals set global public policy based on who can behave the most outrageously.
But someone we live in an upside down reality where payment processors are the ones forcing stores to remove NSFW content.
We can fight back. Any legal and nonviolent response against the "collective shout" people is acceptable. Share your ideas.
If you run a platform and see any of them as users get rid of them. Delete their account, wipe their data, ban them. Don't deliver them pizza. Don't accept restaurant reservations in their name. They think they can police others, it goes both ways.
Realistic? At this point, no. But we should normalize this sort of response. Wannabe bullies should be scared of personal consequences.
To be clear: i do think part of the complaint from the collective should be heard (CSAM have no place anywhere, and rape roleplaying should stay in bedrooms), but including incest or any non-violent fetish in the complaint seems weird and seems equating it to rape and child abuse, which it is not (it's a disturbing fetish to me, but _a lot_ of fetishes are disturbing to me, and i don't think anybody should ban them). My issue with it is that it is again a show of force by payment processors and i heavily dislike it.
The fact that a drawing can be "CSAM" is ridiculous, frankly. Why shouldn't taboo be explored in fiction? (Manga, Visual Novels, etc.)
Gas fees on Ethereum L2s like Base cost $0.0016 to send USDC, and $0.00064 to send ETH.
Itch could update the prices pegged to BTC or ETH, yes, but they'd either want to keep them, or liquidate them to USD, in which case there is risk of fluctuation between when the token is sent, and when it's liquidated.
1. Regulate the payment processors. This would need widespread agreement and some kind of global initiative—possible, but sounds like a LOONG process.
2. Invent an open payment technology that isn't crypto. Probably the most desirable outcome, but another LOONG process.
3. Bow down to the payment processor mafia. Sadly, this is where we exist; I think it's the worst possible option. Imagine what else we may be prevented from buying in future. Cash is becoming harder and harder to spend in the real world. First, they came for our porn; why wouldn't they come for our food, eventually?
Really no reason at all to hold or handle USD compared to nearly anything else right now :)
[1]: https://coinmarketcap.com/currencies/euro-coin/
I just looked up a few porn sites and they don't provide Mastercard/Visa payment but they just take the national payment processor of the few (EU) countries I checked.
What does this mean? "national payment processor"?
Those are all nationwide networks that allow online payments (online in this case, but they also handle most non-cash payments offline) inside these countries. I think most countries have such a network (under various legal forms, for example CB is a consortium but Bancontact is for-profit, while I think Interac in Canada is a non-profit, etc) but the US doesn't have an equivalent as far as I know.
[edit: perhaps this pushing for puritan values is actually a 9000 IQ move to promote crypto-backed stores]
They'll censor any content they disagree with.
Crypto can't be censored so easily.
Censorship is a social problem, and needs to be solved with social methods, such as enacting payment neutrality laws like net neutrality laws (hah, as if), or electricity neutrality laws etc.
Using crypto can temporarily bypass it, until it doesn't or you are stigmatized somehow under the law for it.
In some countries, content in favor of certain minority groups is banned. For sure those groups ability to take payment is impacted.
Sometimes those minorities are denied citizenship and can't open a bank account e.g. the Rohingya in Myanmar.
This concern is virtually unheard of today, and I wouldn't be surprised to learn that they actually had a slight effect in the opposite direction: some of those youth getting trouble outside are now indoors playing harmless video games.
Steam has the power to fight if it needed to hold its ground while it adjusts its policy.
With itch, I doubt so. In one swell swoop itch would be in the water; immediately action required.
I am not saying it's the correct way but to save a ship from being sank, credit card stuff are normally merciless...
This is getting really old. We shouldn't be bound by the moral compass of payment processors on what we can use our own money for.
>>> GNU Taler is a privacy-preserving payment system. Customers can stay anonymous, but merchants can not hide their income through payments with GNU Taler. This helps to avoid tax evasion and money laundering.
[1]: https://www.taler.net/en/index.html
So is shooting someone, setting fire to houses, etc etc.
Games aren't reality, setting fire to a house in skyrim doesn't mean you've commit or are planning an arson and should be sent to prison.
I agree that somehow "rape in a game" feels different from "shooting someone in a game". Does it feel different because of the puritanical christian culture we've been brought up in, where cops murdering people with guns is normal and celebrated, but priests raping young boys is still mostly hidden? Is it because there's some fundamental difference between the two crimes? Is getting perverse sexual pleasure criminal, but having fun shooting people in grand theft auto is okay?
My opinion is that even though it feels different, it's fine. Consensual rape-play in the bedroom isn't my cup of tea, I won't do it, it gives me the ick, but people can do what they want. If those same people want to play rape games, well, it gives me the ick, but that's up to them, they and the game developers consent to this media existing, and it's fiction, just like rape-play in the bedroom is. The safe word is alt+f4
(throwaway account because obviously)
We also have murder and the most horrific things, including going around and shooting unarmed civilians in GTA in Video Games.
There's a difference between speech about a thing, and the actual thing. The former should be legal, the latter sometimes isn't.
I can make jobs about chopping people up all day. That doesn't mean I should get life in prison for murder.
My god, those poor pixels are being sexually abused!
In fiction.
It is both. The monopoly (or duopoly) is what enables the demands for censorship.
It is impractically slow, the user experience is too high a bar, it lacks meaningful consumer protections and it would not be able to handle the transaction volume. That it hasn't been able to address those problems in the last fifteen years calls the whole enterprise into question.
UX for websites was weak, mobile barely existed, https was not used, online payments were limited to certain websites, fraud was common and anyone with CC number could steal from your card.
Internet was not early and Crypto is now at that level. So think bigger and think about process.
Forever miserable people who wish to make everyone else miserable as well.
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Actual porn OK. Onlyfans OK.
But fiction, for some reason, is not.
What's actually happening is any content disliked by certain billionaires is being flagged by payment providers under their influence.
When they see something they disagree with, they'll send an email to the CEO of Visa or MasterCard and action gets taken.
I'm not saying I dont believe you, but do you have any form of evidence to back this claim?
This particular example is also porn but you can see how the same method could be used for anything else even remotely controversial.
And it's a similar same case for Facebook. The EU complained for years about anything from hate speech spread by the general public to outright propaganda campaigns, Facebook did nothing - but complained when the EU finally had enough and introduced the DSA.
I do not see how a game in steam or itch.io where everything is fictional is anywhere close to that or requiring such moderation. This is a totally different issue, in the same way that a game involving killing others is not the same as an actual video of somebody killing people. Shall we ban books featuring similar themes too?
If Visa spends years in criminal court because a book store accepted a credit card payment for an illegal book, then yes, expect Visa to start placing limits on card processing for bookstores.
And with Facebook: I mean yes theoretically it is good that the EU is trying to do something, I'm all up for it. But Facebook is in my opinion worse than it ever was and gets more worse every day.
It's one thing to have occasional issues with stuff slipping through the cracks, that happens. But it's a completely different thing to just not do anything for years. In the case of Steam, let's just take the recent Nazi scandal [1] - reports of users using blatant Nazi imagery and vocabulary date back almost a decade [2] and that's the oldest thing I could find in a minute of Googling, I 'member this being a thing even years before Trump's first presidency but honestly I can't be bothered to search for more old Nazi shit at 9 o'clock in the morning.
Had Steam done something about the Nazis back in 2017, I guarantee you that 2024 Bloomberg piece wouldn't ever have come into existence. That's seven years in which Steam did nothing to combat users using swastikas - stuff that could trivially be caught using machine learning, even back in the time.
[1] https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2024-11-14/white-sup...
[2] https://forum.gamespodcast.de/viewtopic.php?t=2478
How would moderation help when the games that are being removed from the platforms are perfectly legal, and in compliance with the terms the platforms out on the creators?
The only problem with the games is that a highly influential group of people views them as immoral, and use them as a stepping stone towards achieving their broader goal of censoring all adult content.
The nazi thing may have brought a little bit more attention to Steam but I really can't imagine it was a big decisive factor instead of Steam's allowing of porn games and displaying them on the best selling lists with the adult options enabled
[1] https://www.givesendgo.com/rift-connor-emergency-fund
otherwise indeed it's a lot of extra work & red tape for everyone else because of some ultimate dickheads, better to and bash them directly I'd say
of course still need to have checks and publishing rules etc
I wonder if (when?) we reach a tipping point when people massively start using it. Censoring porn like this looks like a very strong incentive.
We detached this comment from https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=44676655 and marked it off topic.
It sounds like you're talking about sex. Maybe you're confused?
If someone else can tell you what your gender is, then I could just tell you that your gender is woman and nothing you say could refute that.
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