this post was submitted on 12 Jul 2023
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Louis Rossmann

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About Louis Rossmann

Louis Rossmann is a repair shop owner and a vocal supporter of the Right To Repair movement. He runs a YouTube channel with a variety of content - from board repair videos, to news and updates in the technology space.

His insightful and reasonable opinions on technology and product ownership tend to attract a lot of attention.

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Steam dropping support for Windows 7, 8 and 8.1 means users who purchased games for their PC during that era are SOL if their machine is not capable of running the latest Windows.

Synopsis

In the video, Louis reads a discussion thread between a Steam customer and their support team regarding older Windows versions being dropped. The customer is admittedly a bit salty in their writing. Steam doesn't directly answer the customer's questions, and instead points the customer to Steam's existing statements made about dropping support for older Windows versions.

Louis makes the argument that even though he agrees with Steam's stance on things such as piracy and their general consumer-oriented attitude, if we are dependent on Steam to launch games, especially on older systems where we can't unplug the ethernet and be able to still launch the game, do we really own the game to begin with?

Commenter views

Some commenters mentioned that this is a Chrome issue, as Steam's interface itself is a web browser and if Chromium drops support for older systems, Steam is stuck.

Other commenters mentioned it's a Microsoft issue, as more issues surface in unsupported Windows versions, it would be in Steam's best interests to drop support for these.

Another one mentioned that the DMCA provides an exemption for cracking games that you already own, if it is no longer being supported.

Links

What's your take on this?

Youtube/Invidious (A piped link should be posted by a bot below)

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[–] daleus 7 points 1 year ago

well I can answer that directly..

I have games on steam that haven't operated since windows Vista/7 (at a push), however I recently switched to Linux and it turns out that they "just work", no fiddling required. Double click and play (proton is gold)

As steam have delivered to me the game I paid for, the fact that I previously didn't have the right OS is not their problem. Their part of the agreement is complete, and I am a happy consumer.

I know I don't 'own' any of the games and if Valve shut down tomorrow I would lose access to them, an issue I'm not that arsed about as they are just games and piracy is easy.