logo
How an anti-porn lobby on payment processors censored thousands of video games

How an anti-porn lobby on payment processors censored thousands of video games

CBC21 hours ago
Social Sharing
Video game developers are speaking out after two popular PC games stores made it harder — even impossible — to purchase thousands of games and other digital artworks, as a result of pressure exerted by an Australian anti-porn advocacy group.
The takedown came after Collective Shout successfully lobbied payment networks and processors to stop facilitating financial transactions from storefronts Steam and Itch.io until games with certain content were removed.
But developers say the range of affected works goes well beyond games with explicit sex scenes. Also caught in the sweep are a teen-rated romantic comedy game, some LGBT-themed games by award-winning developer Robert Yang, and a 1920s alternate-history art book that has no sexual content.
"This is incredibly worrying," said Adrienne Bazir, a Toronto-based game developer and artist who makes LGBT games.
"Even just queer people holding hands is seen as not safe for work."
CBC spoke to over a dozen Canadian games developers, creators and industry watchers who say the situation highlights the power held by international financial institutions in determining what kinds of art is deemed acceptable for others to consume, and frequently forces LGBT content and narrative into the darkness.
What's happened so far?
In July, Collective Shout published an open letter saying Steam and Itch hosted games with "rape, incest and child sexual abuse" content.
About a week later, Steam removed hundreds of games with adult or sexual content from sale.
Steam, the world's largest storefront and management platform for PC games with a reported 132 million active monthly users, said in a statement that "certain games on Steam may violate the rules and standards set forth by our payment processors and their related card networks and banks."
It has the effect of shrinking the space available for diverse sexual expression. - Jean Ketterling, University of Saskatchewan
Payment processors include credit card companies like Visa and MasterCard, and other companies that can facilitate purchases like PayPal and Stripe.
Those games were removed from sale to ensure customers could purchase other titles and game content, the statement added.
On July 28, Itch, a relatively smaller player, deindexed all games and other works on its site with the NSFW (not safe for work) tag. That means you can't find those works on the site unless you know the exact name of the creator or game.
According to Game File reporter Nicole Carpenter, searching the NSFW tag on Itch before July 28 brought 7,167 results. Today, it surfaces five or fewer.
Itch's creator Leaf Corcoran said the site's staff is "conducting a comprehensive audit of content to ensure we can meet the requirements of our payment processors." He later said Itch is seeking other payment processors that are willing to work with platforms hosting adult content.
CBC reached out to several payment processors for comment. In a statement, Stripe said, "We do not support adult content," while PayPal replied that it will take action on anything "that violates the law, our policies, or the policies of our partner banks and card networks."
Risky business?
Collective Shout is an advocacy group that describes itself as a "movement against the objectification of women and the sexualization of girls." Its director, Melinda Tankard Reist, told CBC that her group reached out to payment processors after receiving no reply to about 3,000 emails sent to the Valve Corporation, which owns Steam.
Tankard Reist said the group was not seeking to have Itch deindex all its NSFW gaming content. However, developers, artists and other supporters say the campaign has affected works with sexual content that don't cross the line into abusive or illegal behaviour.
That statement doesn't ring true for Jean Ketterling, a University of Saskatchewan assistant professor who specializes in the study of sex and video games.
"This is a tried-and-true playbook. It has the effect of shrinking the space available for diverse sexual expression," she said.
Ketterling pointed to a long history of anti-porn or anti-sex work organizations campaigning against content they deem to be obscene, immoral or illegal. Similar recent cases involved lobbyists targeting payment processors for OnlyFans and Pornhub.
WATCH | When pressure from banks almost led to OnlyFans banning sexual content:
OnlyFans to soon ban sexually explicit content after pressure from bankers
4 years ago
"We're seeing a lot of LGBTQ content come up. We're seeing a lot of stuff that's not even pornographic, but that is just exploring sexual violence or exploring the trans experience," she said.
Val Webber, a postdoctoral researcher at the Sexual Health and Gender Research Lab (SHAG) at Halifax's Dalhousie University, says "high-risk" categories for payment processors typically include items with a potential for fraud or that contain potentially illegal content — such as adult content, firearms, gambling and some medications.
But the processors' terms of service aren't always clear, leading to a wide interpretation of what kinds of content can be considered high-risk, she said.
"They're effectively in charge of creating de facto obscenity law without ever naming specific sexual acts or fantasies or content that is, in fact, not allowed on the platforms," she said.
Several Canadian developers and artists are frustrated that an Australian lobby group and U.S.-based payment processors have impacted their income.
"What we have is a situation where American financial institutions are able to do de facto censorship on a global scale against content that isn't illegal," said Ash Krieder, an independent romance writer based in Kitchener-Waterloo, Ont., whose works were deindexed from Itch. "This is hampering freedom of speech in our country."
Tankard Reist said location is irrelevant. "The internet has no borders. Women and girls everywhere are impacted by male violence against women and misogyny in general which we believed these games perpetuated."
The counter-campaign
Affected developers and their supporters have started phone campaigns and petitions to pressure payment processors to reverse their actions.
One site lists several email addresses and phone numbers for people to lodge their complaints with Visa, MasterCard and other payment companies.
with only 1,000 calls or emails," said Bazir.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Osheaga nearly sold out as trade tensions linger
Osheaga nearly sold out as trade tensions linger

CTV News

time44 minutes ago

  • CTV News

Osheaga nearly sold out as trade tensions linger

The biggest bands are in town this weekend for The Osheaga Music & Arts Festival, but some are wondering if the trade war with the U.S. is impacting the event. The Killers, Olivia Rodrigo and Tyler, The Creator. The biggest bands are in town this weekend for The Osheaga Music & Arts Festival, but some are wondering if the trade war with the U.S. is impacting the event. Osheaga brings in 150-thousand music fans from all over the world for three days, plus an army of staff working the event. The forecast for the 18th edition is sunny, but the political climate has thrown some shade. Professor Julian Karaguesian from McGill University's economics department said, 'The uncertainty about tariffs and the uncertainty about the border have a larger impact than the tariffs themselves. They do. And uncertainty generally, when it passes a certain threshold, is really toxic for investment. It's toxic for business.' Nick Farkas, Evenko's senior vice president for booking and concerts, is also the man who founded Osheaga. He said uncertainty stunts business expectations. 'How it impacts the Canadian dollar and how it impacts, whether people can get comfortable going back and forth over the border.' Karaguesian said trade and tariff talks also affect tourism. 'Year over year, June 24 to June 25, the latest data shows that visits by Americans by car show over the land borders down by 11 per cent and by air, I think it was down by almost 1 per cent.' Yet, Farkas says this weekend is almost sold out. 'Our American sales are pretty much on par with last year, versus Quebec, Ontario, America and the outside international sales. So far, it's looking pretty similar to last year and the year before. So we're encouraged to see that the Americans are still coming.' Americans are still coming, except for some sponsors, says Osheaga site and operations director Eric Fortin-Lambert. 'Because of what happened with the USA, some sponsorships were not able to be here.' He added that Canadian sponsors stepped into those opportunities. The economic ups and downs of putting on the biggest festival of its kind in Canada are matched only by the high notes onstage. Montreal Artist Emi Jeen has the dream come true experience of playing her favourite music festival and said to expect a rollercoaster ride. 'I start very like high energy and I go a little bit down and then up. There's tons of things. We clap hands, we go down together, we jump. Yeah, we it's a it's a nice ride.' Osheaga will take place on Aug. 1, 2, and 3.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store