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"China" returned 31 posts
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GamezRanker: Might be partially coincidence, and i'm not saying all canadians are against this for the same(or even bad) reasons....still, it does seem rather odd to me that so many canadians seem to be okay with this.
I have a theory or two about it, but its pure conjecture on my part.

Two factors come to mind:
- Baseline degree of polarisation against China (ie, how likely you are to jump the gun about anything China does out of general principle)
- The importance one attributes to the state vs the importance one attributes to corporations (especially as it relates to the amount of control the general populace is expected to have on them)

I don't expect companies to behave democratically via their user-base. Therefore, this does not ruffle any feathers. It makes a certain kind of strategic sense really. Small obscure game vs Chinese market. Its a no brainer.
Post edited December 29, 2020 by Magnitus
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Magnitus: I have a theory or two about it, but its pure conjecture on my part.

Two factors come to mind:
- Baseline degree of polarisation against China
- The importance one attributes to the state vs the importance one attributes to corporations.
I had a similar theory that it's some of that......plus possibly(no offense meant by this bit) some ex-chinese citizens who like/agree with the decision.

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Magnitus: I don't expect companies to behave democratically via their user-base. Therefore, this does not ruffle any feathers. It makes a certain kind of strategic sense really. Small obscure game vs Chinese market. Its a no brainer.
I would expect they'd follow the money, though....and it seems a good number might stop buying or buy less due to their decision.

Also, they likely could've achieved the same thing by blocking the game in china.
Post edited December 29, 2020 by GamezRanker
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GamezRanker: I had a similar theory that it's some of that......plus possibly(no offense meant by this bit) some ex-chinese citizens who like/agree with the decision.
I'm not, but either way, I wouldn't be too quick to label all Chinese expatriates as ardent loyalists. People leave their country for a reason...

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GamezRanker: I would expect they'd follow the money, though....and it seems a good number might stop buying or buy less due to their decision.

Also, they likely could've achieved the same thing by blocking the game in china.
They made their decision, customers will make theirs and we'll see. I think that in terms of the bottom-line, they probably made the right call. The Chinese market is huge and I think most GOGers don't really care (the forums are not a valid sample here).

Of course, the best decision here would probably have been not to agree to the release in the first place, but it is what it is.

For banning the game only in China, I have no idea, though it seems like the Chinese government wanted to scrub the game off the face of the Earth.
Post edited December 29, 2020 by Magnitus
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Magnitus: I'm not, but either way, I wouldn't be too quick to label all Chinese expatriates as ardent loyalists. People leave their country for a reason...
Oh I wasn't(sorry if it came off as such btw)...I was just musing on whether or not the higher than usual number of canadian users seemingly defending GOG's decision was(at least in part) due to ex-chinese defending GOG's move.

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Magnitus: For banning the game only in China, I have no idea, though it seems like the Chinese government wanted to scrub the game off the face of the Earth.
And that is one of the saddest things about all this, imo.
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Not really related, or maybe it is, but I read that link as "CD Projekt Red Escorts News".
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firstpastthepost: I’m not a fan of gog canning any games for anything beyond reasonable reasons, but that’s besides the point. I’m only pointing out that it’s naive to think that a YouTube video of the opinions of a few people that have no real influence outside a relatively tiny bubble would matter to anyone outside said bubble. Clearly you are part of the bubble, and that’s cool. To the vast majority of people outside the bubble it sounds like whining.
Tweets and videos get artists, speakers and musicians from their respective "bubbles" to Very Sincerely Apologize(tm), get fired, de- or blacklisted. Just because those people with "no real influence" who tweeted or recorded videos were displeased by things for reasons, reasonable or not. I mean, where have you been since 2014?

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TerriblePurpose: You're outraged because GOG decided to pull an obscure game by a small company because a group of gamers from China was upset? And this is somehow a big political issue? This outrage about bending to China's will is almost laughable. I guarantee every one of the outraged protesters have houses filled with products made in China, yet they're convinced they're somehow fighting the good fight against evil China by vilifying GOG for not selling a game.
So if it was a "renowned game" by a "big company", and the protesters didn't have a single product made in China in their houses, would you consider that they were fighting the "good fight"?

Germany is free to censor the depiction of the 3rd Reich in their games. If they were to impose that on a game made by, say, a Polish company, and keep it from being distributed to the rest of the world, would you be ok with that? Or if Australia objected to the blood in a game made by a New Zealand studio and prevented its worldwide distribution, would that be a "political issue" for you, big or otherwise? Heck, if [insert populous Christian country here] had made it impossible for the rest of the world to see Life of Brian, would you also have found protests "laughable"?

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Magnitus: The developers of Devotion made an error in judgement, took a cheap shot at China's leader (whether or not you agree with their actions, I find name-calling actual living people to be of bad taste) and antagonised an economic juggernaut which is now making its displeasure known.

Many many other countries have applied economic pressures to get their way, probably less successfully than China it seems. As long as they limit themselves to applying economic pressures and don't send legions of hackers, its all fair game.
That's quite the might-makes-right apologia, but I don't believe you grasp what you're essentially condoning. In the same way that you haven't seen Tibet in movies in a good long while, you'll begin sliding down a pretty damn slippery slope if companies begin kowtowing to China whenever some Easter egg in a foreign game upsets them.
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MarkoH01: ... instead of being plain honest....
Like the Guardian article pointed out, they can't just admit "because China" because they're not licensed in China, and any business they do there (and CP77 is allegedly pretty successful there) is in a grey area. Their silly "because gamers" (sounds rather helpless to me now) maneuvered them into a dead end... GOG PR as we know it...
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pearnon: You're still not following. Do try to keep up if you absolutely must interject.
Enlighten me then. Fact is Nazi symbols are not forbidden in games in Germany any longer. And I can buy Wolfenstein here no problem.

Fact is also that, numerous times, German courts in insane rulings have claimed jurisdiction over "the internet" (yeah, all of it) several times now. But of course they can't really enforce it... Germany's not alone in this, I read about a Canadian ruling in the same vein a while ago.

China can enforce "their rules" internationally because of their sheer economic power and the Western wealth (of a few people...) depending on it. Just look at the (pitfully short) list of countries officially acknowledging Taiwan.
Post edited December 31, 2020 by toxicTom
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pearnon: That's quite the might-makes-right apologia, but I don't believe you grasp what you're essentially condoning. In the same way that you haven't seen Tibet in movies in a good long while, you'll begin sliding down a pretty damn slippery slope if companies begin kowtowing to China whenever some Easter egg in a foreign game upsets them.
The US has applied economic sanctions against various entities (usually countries) for quite some time and few people in the West have been screaming. Screaming now because China is doing it is quite the double standard.

If a governing body decides they don't want to do business with a given entity, because said entity offends them, it is their prerogative. Now, you could argue quite convincingly that the Chinese state is quite easily offended, but that is up to the Chinese people to sort out. If they go too far, they'll just isolate themselves from the rest of the world (they are the biggest economy, but they are still a fraction of the world's economy).

Otherwise, concerning the specific point at hand (not Tibet or Taiwan, but the game Devotion), while being an *rsehole should not be illegal (and as far as I know, the creators of Devotion are not sitting in jail right now), that doesn't mean that there should be no ramification (lost economic opportunities, loss of reputation, etc).

Of course, its unfair that the social/economic consequence of being uncivil are applied proportionately to the leverage of the offended party (taking a cheap shot at the head of China seems to carry a lot more consequences than taking a cheap shot at the mayor of a small village), but it is still inadvisable to needlessly offend people (sometimes, giving offense is just a side-consequence of some other purpose, but other times, it is just needlessly gratuitous and in this case, it was needlessly gratuitous).
Post edited December 31, 2020 by Magnitus
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pearnon: That's quite the might-makes-right apologia, but I don't believe you grasp what you're essentially condoning. In the same way that you haven't seen Tibet in movies in a good long while, you'll begin sliding down a pretty damn slippery slope if companies begin kowtowing to China whenever some Easter egg in a foreign game upsets them.
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Magnitus: The US has applied economic sanctions against various entities (usually countries) for quite some time and few people in the West have been screaming. Screaming now because China is doing it is quite the double standard.
Well, there's a difference, here: we're talking between states that are not the best of friends, not states vs companies. Still, we have to discuss the method of which these sanctions occur: did the US prevent China and Russia, at any point, from trading, or are we talking about the US preventing a conflict of interest among, specifically, NATO nations? Seeing as just about every country throughout history has been doing the tariff war thing, I've just assumed it was a matter of that and military allies agreeing to focus on military interests and how the economy affects that at a national level, rather than laser focused on a particular business. I'll be honest, sure, I've could've done more research, but those offended could've went out of their way to inform me. What china's doing, the people of china are supposedly part of the enforcement, so they don't even have ignorance for an excuse.

I will admit, however, that there has been a targeted attack on TikTok, lately. However, TikTok actually got caught spying on clipboards and other data. Now, if you turned around and said "but facebook and google!" we would be in an agreement on something, then, right? I do believe these companies' data collection tactics pose a realistic threat from a militaristic point of view via tracking logistics, obtaining confidential information on officials, etc. I do believe it would be reasonable for governments to request audits on the data that is stored and evaluate whether that breaches reasonable national security interests. And, it's not like there is no precident for this: Google got caught violating COPPA, hence th COPPA controversy on youtube, where they started to try to pin it on youtubers instead of accepting responsibility for their own data collection.
If a governing body decides they don't want to do business with a given entity, because said entity offends them, it is their prerogative. Now, you could argue quite convincingly that the Chinese state is quite easily offended, but that is up to the Chinese people to sort out. If they go too far, they'll just isolate themselves from the rest of the world (they are the biggest economy, but they are still a fraction of the world's economy).
There's 2 problems to this:

1) We're not talking about China saying it doesn't want to do business with the devs of devotion. We have China saying it doesn't want anyone else doing business with Devotions devs, either.

2) I think we're at the point where we put your theory to the test. China seems to have all the major businesses by the nose-ring, and we're not seeing any changes. Hell, not even getting kicked out of china seems to be enough: the companies will just do whatever they can to convince china to grab them by the nosering again (hello, Google).
Otherwise, concerning the specific point at hand (not Tibet or Taiwan, but the game Devotion), while being an *rsehole should not be illegal (and as far as I know, the creators of Devotion are not sitting in jail right now), that doesn't mean that there should be no ramification (lost economic opportunities, loss of reputation, etc).
Yes, but this is a bit of overstepping going on, here. If i offend the LGBTQIA+ community, it seems reasonable that they might boycott me, as well as friends and family of people in that community. However, an anti-LGBTQIA+ activist should be able to feel right at home, no matter how much of assholes everyone in the trasaction are. How else can we hold power structures accountable for going too far than voting with our wallets and ideas? Say the LGBTQIA+ community adds "P" (pedophile) to the acronym. With the natural pandering companies do (for better or worse, depending on your perspective), if we (including people from the LGBTQIA+ community who might be offended by the decision, which I imagine would be most of the community) can't vote with our wallets, how can capitalism even reflect the average consumer? Just look at the friction that lead to the LGB Alliance splintering from the LGBTQIA+ community. But, this example might be too close to home for some users, so why don't we abstract it to, say, China? Or how about Islam? What about Trump and supporters? What about a vile Christian game? Does it really matter?

You see, in the west, we used to have this separation from "words and ideas" and "physically applied actions." To this degree, "loli hentai" would be legal, but pornography of children would be illegal. It is by this same principle that movies with violence in it is legal, because no one's actually getting killed for the purpose of the movie, but snuff films are very illegal (there seems to be an exception for "incidental recordings" due to their passive nature, which is actually consistent when you think about it). Somewhere along the line, we completely lost this notion, and now speech itself can be a form of violence, especially as we stripped humanity of it's ability to have agency over it's own decisions. Howe can we ever expect humanity to improve if we continue to coddle it to the degree that is has no freedom to act and learn from it's mistakes?
Of course, its unfair that the social/economic consequence of being uncivil are applied proportionately to the leverage of the offended party (taking a cheap shot at the head of China seems to carry a lot more consequences than taking a cheap shot at the mayor of a small village), but it is still inadvisable to needlessly offend people (sometimes, giving offense is just a side-consequence of some other purpose, but other times, it is just needlessly gratuitous and in this case, it was needlessly gratuitous).
And who gets to be the arbiter of what is gratuitous and what is not? I don't think we have the level of omniscience to separate bad intentions from bad delivery, no matter how obvious it may seem at the time. But, consider what was going on here: are we sure it asn't a placeholder? Normally, i'd say no (because it looks to be baked into the wall's texture), but it seems they didn't take long to remove it, suggesting to me that my reason for such an assumption was wrong (it really wasn't baked into the wall). Who knows what all other other junk was used as place holders? Things like this get found all the time. Heck, Halo 1 has a hidden message that was never meant to be found where some dude announced his love for his wife/girlfriend. This kind of thing happens all the time, and lots of times things don't get found, but sometimes accidentally they get found. Just yesterday I decrypted a message in Cyberdimension Neptunia: 4 Goddesses Online that the translators never translated, which suggests to me that it wasn't meant to be decrypted (and, honestly, i'd be surprised if anyone else has managed to decrypt it, even in Japan).
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toxicTom: Enlighten me then.
From you attitude towards this topic in this and other threads, I assumed you were just trying to treadmill and derail the discussion. I misjudged you and apologize.

By "Germany is free to...", I don't mean "Germany still actively censors certain symbology in games". I mean Germany did it in the past and is free to re-implement it, much like Australia censored and still censors certain games in Australia, and certain Christian majority nations censored or outright banned certain movies, and are well within their rights to do it in their own countries.

The issue at hand is one country effectively prohibiting other countries from purchasing a game made by a third party. Like Germany flexing its muscle to forbid EU countries from buying a game by a Luxembourg studio that has an Easter egg in which a photo of a bloodhound has the name "Angela" underneath it, for example

Hope that cleared it up.

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Magnitus: The US has applied economic sanctions against various entities (usually countries) for quite some time and few people in the West have been screaming. Screaming now because China is doing it is quite the double standard.
- The US never applied economic sanctions because of mockery directed at their presidents, and we all know there's been plenty of that throughout the years. Let alone a deleted Easter egg in a game.
- There's been plenty of 'screaming' about that.
- The sanctions were never about "the rest of the world can't trade with country X", but "The US won't trade with country X" (though, granted, they certainly made appeals to morality to have others follow in their footsteps).

If a governing body decides they don't want to do business with a given entity, because said entity offends them, it is their prerogative.
That's a given. Which is why it's not even the point and never has been (see above).

while being an *rsehole should not be illegal (and as far as I know, the creators of Devotion are not sitting in jail right now), that doesn't mean that there should be no ramification (lost economic opportunities, loss of reputation, etc).
Exactly. And the expected consequences are "you won't be selling this game in China, buster". Again, the problem is when you have other companies kowtowing to a thin-skinned, prickly regime and help turn that into a de facto worldwide ban.
Post edited December 31, 2020 by pearnon
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Aplomado: The Chinese Communist Party is one of the greatest mass murderers in human history.

Xi Jinping presides over concentration camps for Uyghurs. He persecutes Christians and other religious minorities. His government murders dissidents and sells their organs.

They deserve all the scorn the world can offer them.

It is truly bizarre to see a westerner defending the "right" of one of these moral monsters to not be offended.
Some of the greatest murderers in human history were in our own backyard. I'm talking of course about the near-extinction of the native South American and North American cultures (actually, technically, some did go extinct).

Then, in the US, you had the slavery, an internal war over it (guess some people really wanted it bad), Jim Crow... a needless war in Iraq (a country which wouldn't have been so messed up btw if the West had not drawn the country lines ways that are so messed up as to ensure the entire region is unstable for generations to come post-WWII)... a war which was in the name of fighting the greatest terrorist to have breached your soil, who was actually trained by you.

Of course, you also had the toppling of a bunch of democracies, namely in South America (all in the name of fighting the commies of course), your horrendous treatment of Cuba... and lets not forget how you treat many of your own citizens (who in one of the most prosperous countries in the world have a hard time affording basic healthcare or higher education).

And China... victim of the opoid-war and several unfair treaties imposed by the West. One could say that they became so radicalised so quickly due to military pressures from the West (for them, it was a struggle for survival after all).

None of this is uniquely characteristic of Western Countries (lets not flagellate ourselves too much about that), we were simply given the bigger baton and we did as people do when they have the bigger baton. We used it of course.

So no, the Chinese are not evil. The Chinese are quite human I assure you.

We are a very social species, but we're also a very tribal one. Our empathy has an unfortunately tendency to end at the peripheries of whichever group we call ours.
Post edited January 01, 2021 by Magnitus
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kohlrak: Well, there's a difference, here: we're talking between states that are not the best of friends, not states vs companies.
Its even worse when you apply it to an entire country. A lot more people are adversely affected, may of whom have nothing to do with the grievance.

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kohlrak: Still, we have to discuss the method of which these sanctions occur: did the US prevent China and Russia, at any point, from trading, or are we talking about the US preventing a conflict of interest among, specifically, NATO nations? Seeing as just about every country throughout history has been doing the tariff war thing, I've just assumed it was a matter of that and military allies agreeing to focus on military interests and how the economy affects that at a national level, rather than laser focused on a particular business. I'll be honest, sure, I've could've done more research, but those offended could've went out of their way to inform me. What china's doing, the people of china are supposedly part of the enforcement, so they don't even have ignorance for an excuse.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_embargo_against_Cuba

The US lost all rights to critize any country for applying economic sanctions after this one.

Whats even worse is that Cuba previously had a more diverse agriculture. They specialised into sugar (and became heavily dependant on trade) because they had a foreign-backed dictatorship that pandered to foreign interests as opposed to what was good for Cuba.

Of course, that made it doubly painful when the sanction was put in effect. Quite disgusting really.

You can say what you want about Castro's dictatorship, at least, he was in it for his own country which is a definite step up from his US-backed predecessor.

And compared to that, putting up sanctions against a game (in terms of overall impact on people's lives) seems quite small doesn't it?
Post edited January 01, 2021 by Magnitus
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kohlrak: Well, there's a difference, here: we're talking between states that are not the best of friends, not states vs companies.
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Magnitus: Its even worse when you apply it to an entire country. A lot more people are adversely affected, may of whom have nothing to do with the grievance.
Even in a country where there are no elections, the people are still responsible for their government. If their government is posing a legitimate threat to another government, it's fair. The objective of economic sanctions between countries is to pose a "more peaceful" form of deterrance than war.

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kohlrak: Still, we have to discuss the method of which these sanctions occur: did the US prevent China and Russia, at any point, from trading, or are we talking about the US preventing a conflict of interest among, specifically, NATO nations? Seeing as just about every country throughout history has been doing the tariff war thing, I've just assumed it was a matter of that and military allies agreeing to focus on military interests and how the economy affects that at a national level, rather than laser focused on a particular business. I'll be honest, sure, I've could've done more research, but those offended could've went out of their way to inform me. What china's doing, the people of china are supposedly part of the enforcement, so they don't even have ignorance for an excuse.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_embargo_against_Cuba

The US lost all rights to critize any country for applying economic sanctions after this one.
The first paragraph there shows what happened: Cuba allowed US entrepreneurs come in, establish businesses, then simply took the businesses from them without compensation. The natural thing to do, then, would be to disallow business between the two coutnries, because Cuba was clearly exploiting americans.

Whats even worse is that Cuba previously had a more diverse agriculture. They specialised into sugar (and became heavily dependant on trade) because they had a foreign-backed dictatorship that pandered to foreign interests as opposed to what was good for Cuba.

Of course, that made it doubly painful when the sanction was put in effect. Quite disgusting really.
Maybe you shouldn't, as a country, simply take hard-earned work from citizens of a foreign country without compensation. How much money might have been invested by the US government, for example, or the citenzenry of the country via the stock market? We can talk about how horrible the results were, but if you come up to me face-to-face and slap me, i'm probably going to knock you out. We could say, "yes, Cuba has the right as it's own country," but that would be akin to inviting someone into your house then invoking castle doctrine. Cuba lost the highground before the sanctions even happened.

You can say what you want about Castro's dictatorship, at least, he was in it for his own country which is a definite step up from his US-backed predecessor.

And compared to that, putting up sanctions against a game (in terms of overall impact on people's lives) seems quite small doesn't it?
But notice the sanctions are quite different, here: the game has done no tangible damage to China, unlike Cuba. And we're not just talking about a minor resource: we're talking about oil during the discussions of "the energy crisis." A modern equivalent would be if all chinese owned domain-names (that end with US owned suffices, like .com, .us, .edu, .org, etc) in the US were confiscated and suddenly pointed to US owned websites.

EDIT: The us has done this before on many occasionas, actually. There was a server in China that was pretty popular called MegaUpload, and overnight it vanished "because of piracy." In fact, my own website was taken down when Microsoft targeted my domain provider Ex Parte. Although Microsoft won that court case, it violated it's ex parte agreement to keep my website and other websites not involved in it's case running. And, yes, i'm sure you'll remember that in both cases americans who were aware of it were fairly upset.
Post edited January 01, 2021 by kohlrak
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Magnitus: Its even worse when you apply it to an entire country. A lot more people are adversely affected, may of whom have nothing to do with the grievance.
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kohlrak: Even in a country where there are no elections, the people are still responsible for their government. If their government is posing a legitimate threat to another government, it's fair. The objective of economic sanctions between countries is to pose a "more peaceful" form of deterrance than war.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_embargo_against_Cuba

The US lost all rights to critize any country for applying economic sanctions after this one.
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kohlrak: The first paragraph there shows what happened: Cuba allowed US entrepreneurs come in, establish businesses, then simply took the businesses from them without compensation. The natural thing to do, then, would be to disallow business between the two coutnries, because Cuba was clearly exploiting americans.

Whats even worse is that Cuba previously had a more diverse agriculture. They specialised into sugar (and became heavily dependant on trade) because they had a foreign-backed dictatorship that pandered to foreign interests as opposed to what was good for Cuba.

Of course, that made it doubly painful when the sanction was put in effect. Quite disgusting really.
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kohlrak: Maybe you shouldn't, as a country, simply take hard-earned work from citizens of a foreign country without compensation. How much money might have been invested by the US government, for example, or the citenzenry of the country via the stock market? We can talk about how horrible the results were, but if you come up to me face-to-face and slap me, i'm probably going to knock you out. We could say, "yes, Cuba has the right as it's own country," but that would be akin to inviting someone into your house then invoking castle doctrine. Cuba lost the highground before the sanctions even happened.

You can say what you want about Castro's dictatorship, at least, he was in it for his own country which is a definite step up from his US-backed predecessor.

And compared to that, putting up sanctions against a game (in terms of overall impact on people's lives) seems quite small doesn't it?
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kohlrak: But notice the sanctions are quite different, here: the game has done no tangible damage to China, unlike Cuba. And we're not just talking about a minor resource: we're talking about oil during the discussions of "the energy crisis." A modern equivalent would be if all chinese owned domain-names (that end with US owned suffices, like .com, .us, .edu, .org, etc) in the US were confiscated and suddenly pointed to US owned websites.

EDIT: The us has done this before on many occasionas, actually. There was a server in China that was pretty popular called MegaUpload, and overnight it vanished "because of piracy." In fact, my own website was taken down when Microsoft targeted my domain provider Ex Parte. Although Microsoft won that court case, it violated it's ex parte agreement to keep my website and other websites not involved in it's case running. And, yes, i'm sure you'll remember that in both cases americans who were aware of it were fairly upset.
You can try to frame the issue to circumvent the fact that the US controlled another country by proxy via a dictator and then cried wolf when said country revolved and chose not to honor commitments that were made while it was a puppet state.

However, I will bring your attention to this fact in particular:

"Since 1992, the UN General Assembly has passed a resolution every year condemning the ongoing impact of the embargo and declaring it in violation of the Charter of the United Nations and of international law. In 2014, out of the 193-nation assembly, 188 countries voted for the nonbinding resolution, the United States and Israel voted against and the Pacific Island nations Palau, Marshall Islands and Micronesia abstained.[2][14] Human-rights groups including Amnesty International,[2] Human Rights Watch,[15] and the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights[16] have also been critical of the embargo. "

Literally, out of 193 countries at an assembly, 188 agreed (and I'm sure you know how hard it is to reach a consensus internationally on such matters) that the US was in the wrong here.

Don't get me wrong, I'm not out to bash on the US specifically here (you guys are human too). Its just that before going too far in trying to take the moral high ground, it a good idea to look at your own misdeeds.

I'm not saying that some of the things happening in China are not worrysome (they are). However, in the grand scheme of things, this particular issue is small potatoes. I would also strongly resist framing China as the worst country in the world (we all have skeletons in our closet).
Post edited January 01, 2021 by Magnitus
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Magnitus: Its just that before going too far in trying to take the moral high ground, it a good idea to look at your own misdeeds.
As Peter Griffin would say: "Who....the hell....cares?"

Our faults are not the topic at hand here......also if you wanna essentially keep shilling for china you're barking up the wrong tree.

The issue at hand, btw, is GOG's delisting of Devotion and the group likely at least partially responsible for such....not the "sins" of the countries of those critical of the decision.
Post edited January 01, 2021 by GamezRanker