Valve Faces Lawsuit Over Video Game Gambling (bloomberg.com)
An anonymous reader writes from a report via Bloomberg: Valve's Counterstrike: Global Offensive game is being sued for its role in the multibillion-dollar gambling economy that has fueled the game's popularity. Michael John McLeod filed a lawsuit Thursday in the U.S. District Court in Connecticut alleging that Valve violated gambling laws and engaged in racketeering with a handful of off-shore gambling companies. McLeod, who has been gambling on CS:GO since 2014, is asking for class-action status for the suit. The suit was first reported by Polygon and doesn't give a specific request for damages, nor does it say how much money he lost by betting on the site. According to Bloomberg: "Valve provided for money, technical support, and advice to such websites as CSGO Lounge and Diamonds, which take bets, and OPSkins, which runs a market where virtual goods are traded and can be redeemed for cash." Valve has yet to respond to the suit.
The 3 top Twitch streamers have quit streaming the game. Twitch has 3 to 4 Esport companies CSGO tournaments a week. Twitch also has its own weekly CSGO turny which the finalist play on TBS every weekend. CSGO is over exposed and will die soon just like Starcraft before it. If you have skins sell out now at the top of the market. No more skin gambling and it is all over.
http://www.e-league.com/news/2...
Isn't this basically the same as suing winter because people gamble on hockey
Not really. Valve has been on a lot of people's radar already for how some of its F2P marketplaces are operating. (Team Fortress, DOTA, and CS:GO in particular.)
http://wccftech.com/problem-un...
A 2nd part of the issue is that the major Casino's are unregulated, allow minors to play, (and accusations that its rigged by its owners etc.) So these sites are operating illegally; and quite probably corrupt.
There's a reasonable argument to bad that Valve has an obligation to prevent such sites from tying into its APIs etc.
There is also a reasonable argument to be made that Valve is endorsing it by allowing such things as this:
For example:
CS:GO Lounge
"A community based around the trading of CS:GO items "
"trading" lulz... right, "trading"... the discussion has a nice forum post pinned for everyone:
Bets: the all-in-one guide
http://steamcommunity.com/grou...
or this, a "hey kids, if you got scammed its on you" and then signs off with safe betting.
http://steamcommunity.com/grou...
This isn't on some 3rd party site. This is right on the steam forums, in a Steam Group. You can arguably suggest that its not steams problem to stop 3rd parties from betting... but this stuff is right on Steam. They probably do need to take some ownership of the issue if they are letting it make itself that comfortable right on steam itself.