JonathanPower
Member
That's exactly what they did.
No. See the post right before your.
That's exactly what they did.
If they lose and Valve counter sue they are done as a company.
They should rebrand themselves as "Digital Suicide".
...I really wish they hadn't chosen the name Digital Homicide.
That joke was funny the first few times I read it, but since then, we cannot go a single DH topic on an Internet discussion, without at least five people cracking that same joke, all thinking they were the first to do so. Just look in this thread alone. Beaten several times.
They know law suits cost money right
They know law suits cost money right
If only they put as much effort into their games as they do coming up with frivolous lawsuits
If they lose and Valve counter sue they are done as a company.
https://itch.io/s/4819/going-out-for-business-bundleSuper Mega Bundle
A sale hosted by digitalhomicide
All items 5% off! or buy everything for $19.99! Regularly $85.41 Save 76%!
Games can also be found on amazon
Thanks for the link. So Valve removed their games as a consequence of the subpoema granted by the court. At this point, lets the court also enstablish whether Valve had the right to do such a thing.
Thanks for the link. So Valve removed their games as a consequence of the subpoema granted by the court. At this point, lets the court also enstablish whether Valve had the right to do such a thing.
Thanks for the link. So Valve removed their games as a consequence of the subpoema granted by the court. At this point, lets the court also enstablish whether Valve had the right to do such a thing.
They own the digital store, why would DH they have a leg to stand on?
If they lose and Valve counter sue they are done as a company.
Because I guess you sign a contract to have your games distributed on steam and there should be specific conditions under which a game can be removed. So it all comes down to what are the terms of the Steam distribution agreement.
Because I guess you sign a contract to have your games distributed on steam and there should be specific conditions under which a game can be removed. So it all comes down to what are the terms of the Steam distribution agreement.
Yeah it's really rare for Valve to take action like this. You have to really fuck up to get booted from Steam.Doubt it, usually they throw in a line that they can delete your shit and have a right to refusal at their discretion just like any forum or online account.
That said Valve want your business so it's on them to not be dicks and have the platform people want to do business on, meaning you really done fuck up if you prod the beast called Valve into action like this.
I actually do support them suing people who were threatening them and their families.
Good god, those guys will be billionaires when this is over!
What would they counter sue for? I assume DH will use some business practice law. Like if a shop in a mall had its window smashed, and security/management refused to help. Since its pretty clear Valve never cared about there steam forum trolls.
I am pretty sure that poster was being sarcastic.If you think these arrogant bumblefucks have any chance of winning...well you haven't been paying attention.
So I'm confused here. Digital Homicide is clearly in the right aren't they?
Two wrongs don't make a right. This is just "Well, they did it first!" but with lawyers. Plus, no matter what those users did it doesn't entitle DH to people's personal information. The only way I think they could be in the right is if every one of those 100 steam users sent death threats. Other than that, welcome to the internet. It's not a nice place.
Actually, that I would disagre with. Generally speaking; when there are valid claims of Defamation anonymously posted on the internet, the law is replete with cases in most jurisdictions that allow third party discovery to discover the identity of those individuals. Death threats aren't the qualifier here.
People were joking about them suing valve. This shit is hilarious.