Deep search
Rewards
Search
Copilot
Images
Videos
Maps
News
Shopping
More
Flights
Travel
Hotels
Real Estate
Notebook
Top stories
Sports
U.S.
2024 Election
Local
World
Science
Technology
Entertainment
Business
More
Politics
Any time
Past hour
Past 24 hours
Past 7 days
Past 30 days
Best match
Most recent
Steam, Valve
Got a Problem With Steam? Updated Agreement Lets Gamers Sue Valve
Any disputes are to go forward in court instead of arbitration,' according to Valve, which is facing a class-action suit for 'allegedly maintaining an unlawful monopoly' in PC gaming.
Steam will let you sue Valve now
Previously, Steam’s user agreement said that “you and Valve agree to resolve all disputes and claims between us in individual binding arbitration” for all disputes related to Steam, your account, hardware, or the company’s content and services. The new agreement eliminates any mention of a binding arbitration policy.
Surprise Steam agreement update says you can now sue Valve directly
Valve used to have a forced arbitration clause in its subscriber agreement, but that's no longer the case.The Latest Tech News, Delivered to Your Inbox
Steam doesn’t want to pay arbitration fees, tells gamers to sue instead
Valve Corporation, tired of paying arbitration fees, has removed a mandatory arbitration clause from Steam's subscriber agreement. Valve told gamers in yesterday's update that they must sue the company in order to resolve disputes.
Want to Sue For Lack Of CS2 Updates? Valve’s New Terms Have Just Opened The Door For Lawsuits Against Steam
Want an update to Counter-Strike 2? You can sue Valve now with the new Steam Subscriber Agreement. We can't guarantee your chances though.
Valve removes arbitration from its Steam agreements — here’s what that means for you
Legal experts consider this a win for Steam users, even if most of them will likely never take Valve to court. Consumers are usually required in such agreements to arbitrate and n
Valve Removes Arbitration Clause from Steam Subscriber Agreement
Valve has removed the arbitration clause and class action waiver from the Steam Subscriber Agreement, allowing US players to take disputes to court.
Valve’s ARM64 game testing points towards new Steam hardware, if vaguely
Valve are likely up to something hardware-related again, report NotebookCheck. Their next chunk of plastic and wires – following the Valve Index, Steam Deck and Steam Deck OLED – could swap PC gaming’s favoured x86 architecture for ARM, the type of processor favoured by the Nintendo Switch, Macs, and mobile phones.
Valve will see you in court! No, really, Steam's just updated its subscriber agreement so that 'all disputes and claims proceed in court'
If you live outside the United Kingdom or EU, you might've had a pop-up lunge into your Steam game today informing you, helpfully, that updates to the Steam Subscriber Agreement had affected your consumer rights.
GamesIndustry
10h
Valve dropping individual arbitration for consumer complaints in the US
Valve is dropping individual arbitration as its way to resolve conflicts with consumers in the US, instead saying such ...
3h
Valve is pouring money into Arch Linux to further improve Steam gaming
Valve has used Arch Linux as the basis for its gaming-focused SteamOS platform since 2022. The company, co-founded by Gabe ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results
Trending now
NBA Hall of Famer dies
‘Ring of fire’ eclipse in Oct
Helene wreaks havoc
Trump's Erie rally
Blocks songs from artists
Illegal cloning sentencing
Grammy-winning singer dies
NYC tunnel shutdown
Harris' Las Vegas rally
Mich. nuclear plant to restart
Firefighters injured in crash
Defensive Player of the Year
To sue Google, Samsung
Line Fire prompts evacuation
Newsom vetoes AI safety bill
Sells stake in DirecTV
Oil prices climb
Three PFLP leaders killed
Crew-9 astronauts at ISS
Israeli forces launch raids
37 militants killed in Syria
Ozzie Virgil Sr. dies at 92
$567M Taiwan defense aid
To receive FEMA briefing
US wins Presidents Cup
US port strike looms
Seeks bribery dismissal
Feedback