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Valve Removes Arbitration Requirement From Steam Subscriber Agreement: Difference between revisions

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In September 2024, [[Valve]] removed both the individual binding arbitration requirements and class action waiver from the [https://store.steampowered.com/subscriber_agreement Steam Subscriber Agreement], which is, essentially, [[Steam]]'s [[End-User License Agreement]].
In September 2024, [[Valve]] removed both the individual [[Forced Arbitration|binding arbitration]] requirements and class-action waiver from the [https://store.steampowered.com/subscriber_agreement Steam Subscriber Agreement], which is, essentially, [[Steam]]'s [[End-User License Agreement]].


== Implications ==
== Implications ==
This restores consumer rights to court litigation and class action capacity, instead of only arbitrating, in order to resolve disputes with Steam.
This restores consumer rights to both court litigation and class-action lawsuits, rather than being bound to forced arbitration, for resolving disputes with Steam.


== Sources/Links ==
== Sources/Links ==

Latest revision as of 05:31, 16 January 2025

In September 2024, Valve removed both the individual binding arbitration requirements and class-action waiver from the Steam Subscriber Agreement, which is, essentially, Steam's End-User License Agreement.

Implications[edit | edit source]

This restores consumer rights to both court litigation and class-action lawsuits, rather than being bound to forced arbitration, for resolving disputes with Steam.

Sources/Links[edit | edit source]