• @ccunning
    link
    English
    1428 days ago

    Why wouldn’t they just put journalists they gave access to under embargo?

    • @edgemaster72
      link
      English
      35
      edit-2
      28 days ago

      It’s not clear if he actually got access from Valve or from a friend or someone else. The article simply states

      Earlier today, I received a no-strings-attached invite to play Deadlock on Steam.

      • @ccunning
        link
        English
        328 days ago

        Ok - but they all originate from Valve, right? They couldn’t just put it behind a paywall or “NDA”wall?

        • @edgemaster72
          link
          English
          15
          edit-2
          28 days ago

          From my understanding users of the beta can then invite others to join as well, Valve isn’t necessarily directly choosing who has access. So if Valve didn’t send the invite themselves they wouldn’t know to specifically put someone under a more strict NDA or whatnot because they’re a journalist. Could they have done more to restrict all users from sharing information? Yes, since apparently you just have to hit escape to bypass the agreement pop up, and there’s no other sort of NDA or contract or w/e in place upon joining.

          I’m just speculating, but I think they chose not to do that so people could openly get their friends playing with them instead of going through waves of sign ups and hoping to get in together, or otherwise risk people losing interest when they can only play with randos. I could also see a line of thinking where you assume people want to talk about the game, so let them bring others in to play with them and that gives them someone to talk to about it too instead of just spilling the beans for randos on the internet.

          • @ccunning
            link
            English
            328 days ago

            That’s all I’m saying. Valve is the gatekeeper and left the gate wide open. They blew it and they’re looking for someone else to blame.

            • @[email protected]
              link
              fedilink
              English
              1728 days ago

              Valve fucked up but the Verge still broke the social contract regardless of whether they’re legally in the clear or not.

              Doing something just because “it’s legal” doesn’t make it a moral justification. My wife and I have a joint bank account. It is legal for me to take money from it and gamble it all away, the gate is “open” but that doesn’t make it morally justifiable.

              • @[email protected]
                link
                fedilink
                English
                728 days ago

                Meh, I don’t think there’s anything morally wrong with what he did. What he did wasn’t just legal, it’s literally his job. The only issue is that Valve is now angry at him for their own failing.

                To continue the same analogy, they didn’t just leave the gate open, they literally invited a bunch of people and told them to invite other people. I’m not sure what they expected if not this exact situation.

                • @[email protected]
                  link
                  fedilink
                  English
                  1228 days ago

                  Valve isn’t really angry as far as I can tell, or have heard. They’re about as angry as any other person which goes and posts this stuff online: revoking access. If Valve wanted to expand their testing userbase without people leaking it online, they would have sought NDAs and other legally-binding agreements with testers and - by extension - journalists who can test the game.

              • @ccunning
                link
                English
                028 days ago

                deleted by creator

                • @[email protected]
                  link
                  fedilink
                  English
                  228 days ago

                  The social contract exists always. It isn’t a paper contract but a societal consensus about what constitutes acceptable behavior. Gambling joint money without agreement is not socially acceptable behavior. Bypassing a eula/nda for a beta version of a thing and then spreading the info just because you’re legally in the clear is not societally acceptable behavior. It doesn’t matter that it shouldn’t have been so easy to do so or that they won’t face legal consequences.

                  • @ccunning
                    link
                    English
                    0
                    edit-2
                    27 days ago

                    The “social contract” exists with the understanding that journalists are going to report news unrestricted unless there has been a prior agreement. Journalists entire profession reputation and careers are based on respecting their sources.

                    That’s the whole reason embargos exist.