this post was submitted on 01 Aug 2025
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๐ถ"Why you fucking lying"๐ถ
Why would payment processors lie?
This is basically what I said earlier was probably their driving factor.
Payment processors do not care about someone's social norms. Payment processors, however, do not want to get in trouble with a country, because getting their ability to operate in a country suspended would be really bad for them. As a result, countries have lots of leverage over payment processors, which is a good way to apply pressure to commercial websites that use payment processor services.
Collective Shout is in Australia. There are laws against some forms of adult content in Australia.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_banned_video_games_in_Australia
There is some material available on some of these online stores
at least globally, and I'd guess in Australia
that violates those restrictions. Payment processors won't risk getting in trouble with countries.
But I'm not in Australia!
Probably not, but it's also not just Australia that has similar morality laws.
What I'd guess that the online stores are going to most likely do is have lawyers sit down, review the various countries that they sell games in, write up some list summarizing legal restrictions and embed that into their selling policy and add that it's not legal advice, the list may not be current and complete, and that if some published game does wind up violating the law in some country, that they may remove it from sale in that country to conform to the law. Then they're going to re-list the stuff that they're comfortable saying is conformant in the countries where it is conformant. At least some of them have already intended that (a) there's some kind of review process going on and (b) that they expect to be doing reinstatement of games.
That would be nice, but it's very much not what we observe now