Please note that all submissions to the site are subject to the wiki's licence, CC 4.0 BY-SA, as found here

Valve: Difference between revisions

From Consumer Action Taskforce
Jump to navigationJump to search
fixed software
IJGGGR (talk | contribs)
m copyedit
 
(8 intermediate revisions by 4 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
Valve software was founded in 1996 by Gabe Newell and Mike Harrington. It is owner of steam which is a popular digital distribution service.
Valve Corporation, also known as Valve Software, was founded in 1996 by Gabe Newell and Mike Harrington. It is the owner of the popular digital software distribution service [[Steam]]. Valve additionally develops tools frequently used by various professional and amateur creators, such as Source Filmmaker and the Source Engines.  


= legal disputes =
== Legal Disputes ==
Steam's predominance has led to Valve becoming involved in various legal cases. The lack of a formal refund policy led the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission (ACCC) to sue Valve in September 2014 for violating Australian consumer laws that required stores to offer refunds for faulty or broken products


Steam's predominance has led to Valve becoming involved in various legal cases<ref>https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Steam_(service)#Legal_disputes</ref>.


sources
<!-- While we will be referencing Wikipedia often here to get documentation, please for future articles that will branch from here, try to include more diverse references!


https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Steam_(service)#Legal_disputes
Also, all disputes listed here MUST be related to something that harms or helps the consumer, eg. Valve Corporation v. Zaiger, LLC
 
Additionally, could we please get a better preamble here? -->
 
{| class="wikitable"
|+
!Dispute Title
!Year started and ended
(if concluded)
!Background Information
!Aftermath
!Related Articles
|-
|ACCC v. Valve Corporation
|2014-2016
|During this lawsuit, Valve was found by the Australian Federal Court to have refused to offer refunds for faulty or broken products.
|Users now have the ability to easily refund games they purchased, so long as they follow the refund policy.
|
|-
|UFC Que Choisir v. Valve Corporation
|2015-2019
(still disputed)
|UFC Que Choisir sued Valve on the grounds that users deserved to resell their digital licenses.
|Users in France have the right to resell their digital Steam library.
|
|-
|McLeod v. Valve Corp.<ref>https://casetext.com/case/mcleod-v-valve-corp</ref>
|2016-2016
|<!-- Some further reading on this case should be done here before background info should be added. -->
|Absorbed into another legal dispute; continues to be dismissed within Seattle courts.
|<!-- A related article would be ideal here since multiple cases have covered this dispute's topic. -->
|-
|Sean Colvin (and various others) v. Valve Corporation, CD Projekt S.A., CD Projekt, Inc., Ubisoft Entertainment S.A., Ubisoft, Inc., Ubisoft L.A., Inc., kChamp Games, Inc., Rust, LLC, and Devolver Digital, Inc.<ref>https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/business/business-news/popular-gaming-platform-accused-of-abusing-market-power-through-contracts-4124057/</ref>
|2021 - ?
|Five individuals in California sued Valve (among various other publishers) over participating in anticompetitive behavior with the Steam platform, most notably over the sale of games for lesser prices on other platforms.
|Unknown/not concluded.
|<!-- Highly recommend an anticompetitive behavior article here -->
|}
 
== Sources ==
 
<references/>
 
[[Category:Valve Corporation]]
[[Category:Companies]]

Latest revision as of 01:04, 16 January 2025

Valve Corporation, also known as Valve Software, was founded in 1996 by Gabe Newell and Mike Harrington. It is the owner of the popular digital software distribution service Steam. Valve additionally develops tools frequently used by various professional and amateur creators, such as Source Filmmaker and the Source Engines.

Legal Disputes[edit | edit source]

Steam's predominance has led to Valve becoming involved in various legal cases[1].


Dispute Title Year started and ended

(if concluded)

Background Information Aftermath Related Articles
ACCC v. Valve Corporation 2014-2016 During this lawsuit, Valve was found by the Australian Federal Court to have refused to offer refunds for faulty or broken products. Users now have the ability to easily refund games they purchased, so long as they follow the refund policy.
UFC Que Choisir v. Valve Corporation 2015-2019

(still disputed)

UFC Que Choisir sued Valve on the grounds that users deserved to resell their digital licenses. Users in France have the right to resell their digital Steam library.
McLeod v. Valve Corp.[2] 2016-2016 Absorbed into another legal dispute; continues to be dismissed within Seattle courts.
Sean Colvin (and various others) v. Valve Corporation, CD Projekt S.A., CD Projekt, Inc., Ubisoft Entertainment S.A., Ubisoft, Inc., Ubisoft L.A., Inc., kChamp Games, Inc., Rust, LLC, and Devolver Digital, Inc.[3] 2021 - ? Five individuals in California sued Valve (among various other publishers) over participating in anticompetitive behavior with the Steam platform, most notably over the sale of games for lesser prices on other platforms. Unknown/not concluded.

Sources[edit | edit source]