there is no such "law" to monitor chat systems in a game - either in the UK or EU. please stop making things up.
What companies are obliged to do is keep "appropriate" records/logs of activity which can be requested by law enforcement . this doesnt just include chat, but also in game activities. these records must be kept in line with the GDPR (amongst other DP laws)
they (ZOS) can use appropriate means (should they choose to do so) to monitor things - this includes AI, but is not prohibitive to this method - they are also morally obligated to act upon reports and escalate where appropriate. thats what the EULA and TOS are about
companies can deem whatever records are approrpriate. including chat logs. eg it would look pretty daft if they didnt keep chat logs and the police were to ask for them - for example real life threats
so are they required by law to monitor chat? no
do they chose to? yes , using appropriate means
im not sure this entire thread is going anywhere tbh
I have already posted multiple links regarding the OSA:
Content moderation: All in-scope platforms must actively monitor and remove illegal content, which may include human, manual or automated content moderation tools.
Text or voice chat functionality (team chat in team-based games, or chat in large open servers which bring player avatars together). There is an exemption for services that only enable user-generated content in the form of SMS, email or MMS messages and/or one-to-one live aural communications.
All in-scope services will need to comply with a range of obligations, including risk assessment and mitigation, protecting users from illegal content and child users from certain harmful content, operating complaints processes, reporting and record-keeping. Most businesses will also need to make changes to their terms of service (or EULAs). Larger services that pose risks of several different types of harm are subject to the most onerous obligations.
*sigh* the wording is children and young people because in some EU countries being 16, for example, does not make you a child - however the DSA specifically regards anyone under 18 as being in the same class as children. Hence me saying it "in effect" regards anyone under 18 as a child for the purposes of online safety.
RandomKodiak wrote: »I never use racial slurs etc.. so I am not worried
Wait until you tell a friend in chat that you've visited a German restaurant and ate Nuremberg sausages with
and the last word gets you banned. It gets blurred out by the profanity filter already now, btw Although I've never met any German yet who even felt insulted by this word (nowadays it's seen as colloquial or as teasing banter, no one really finds it offensive), and I've been born in Germany and live here for almost 40 years now.
Alinhbo_Tyaka wrote: »While growing up, too long ago to count, those last five letters could be considered a slur or a joking endearment. It was based on how well you knew the person saying it and the tone in taken in its use. The same went for terms used for folks used for folks from other European countries.
Alinhbo_Tyaka wrote: »While growing up, too long ago to count, those last five letters could be considered a slur or a joking endearment. It was based on how well you knew the person saying it and the tone in taken in its use. The same went for terms used for folks used for folks from other European countries.
I know it had been used as an insult, but nowadays, almost 80 years since the war ended, I really know no one who takes it seriously anymore. Although it always depends on the tone, of course. If a condescending tone is used, everything could be an insult, from "human" to "Zenimax"
But to return to the topic, if someone would get banned for using the word mentioned above in chat, that would be absolutely exaggerated. Even more so of course if the word was used in its original meaning - and the most absurd thing is that Germans (the exact people who are thought to be protected from being insulted by filtering this word) are most likely to be affected by this, because the word just means "herb" in German. The whole issue caught my eye when talking about alchemy ingredients in chat with a German friend and these got blurred out by the filter: