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“We Want To Be On The Right Side Of History”: Ubisoft Partners With Police to Jail Gamers For Their In-Game Speech

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“We Want To Be On The Right Side Of History”: Ubisoft Partners With Police to Jail Gamers For Their In-Game Speech

Post by Segata »

https://www.newswars.com/we-want-to-be- ... me-speech/

Ubisoft, the company behind the Assassin’s Creed and Rainbow Six franchises, has not only partnered with the Anti-Defamation League to fight “hate” in gaming but is also now working with British police to jail gamers for their speech.

British state media is reporting on the news as a great new innovation.

From BBC, “Toxic gaming tackled by Ubisoft’s unique police alert system”:

Rape jokes, racism, bullying – if you’ve picked up a controller, or scrolled a mouse, to dabble in some online gaming then you’ve likely come across plenty.

The gaming industry, like others where people interact online, has been trying to figure out how to get to grips with behaviour like this for years.

Ubisoft, makers of major franchises like Assassin’s Creed and Rainbow Six, has now signed a first-of-its-kind deal with police to try and tackle the issue for its players.

The hope is for this agreement to start a conversation within the industry and see others follow suit.

Working with police

Online gaming is a joyful experience for millions of people every day.

It’s a space where friendships are forged and memorable experienced shared. During the pandemic online games were a saviour for many people’s mental health. However its dark side is also plain to see. Abusive behaviour, deaths threats and grooming – can be found in online gaming spaces.

“We want to be on the right side of history,” says Damien Glorieux a senior director of the Newcastle-based Ubisoft Customer Relationship Centre.

It’s here, and at four other locations around the world, that staff monitor how players of Ubisoft games are getting on – responding to requests for help and actively getting involved with the communities that have evolved around their titles. They deal with everything from purchasing issues to online toxicity.

Other companies have similar set-ups, but what’s unique here is the involvement of local law enforcement.

The deal between the company and Northumbria Police works in two parts.

Firstly, it sees specialist officers share their knowledge and expertise on harmful online interactions with the 200-strong team working at the centre in Newcastle, who then apply that training to their daily work.

Secondly, an agreement is in place so that in extreme cases, where there is a threat to life or potential serious harm spotted, staff can fast track the information to police.

They will then decide whether or not to act.

Glorieux explains to BBC News: “We have millions of players, and tens of millions of interactions – so how can we spot incidents?

“It is daunting, but at the same time it is very important, which is why we wanted to sign this deal and try to make things right .

“We wanted to focus on the most extreme cases, make sure we do the right thing there because it gives us a solid foundation to build the rest of our work around.”

Less than 0.01% of cases that the centre deals with end up requiring police intervention.

That works out as roughly a handful of cases a month. Most of the time, accounts will be temporarily banned or permanently closed if players have breached a code of conduct.

Staff in Newcastle can also recommend the company start legal proceedings in some instances.

‘Threat to life’

Andrew Holliday and his team deal with the cases that get close to, or reach, the threshold for police intervention: “This isn’t just a gaming problem, it’s is an internet problem,” he begins.

“There’s a real appetite to make the whole ecosystem a better place.

“What we’re working on closely with police on is triaging, you know, where we look at a case and decide – ‘right is this is one we can deal with in-house? Or is this something we need to pass on?’”

Gaming is global and some of the cases seen by staff here cross national borders.

Holliday tells us about a recent case in Norway, saying: “Things were said and behaviours displayed that hit our threshold for intervention. There was a threat to life or serious harm.

“The agreement with Northumbria Police meant that after we flagged it, even though it wasn’t a UK citizen – they were able to get Norwegian authorities involved.

“It was a lot quicker, more efficient and safer than trying to do it as a private citizen.”

Some of the staff here argue that the games industry has shied away from talking about the reality of online play for too long. They say it needs to be more open and proactive in talking about the steps being taken to tackle unpleasant, dangerous or threatening behaviour.

For Northumbria Police, Detective Chief Superintendent Deborah Alderson has been leading the work with Ubisoft on this agreement.

She argues that policing “is about prioritising protecting the vulnerable”.

“That means all of our communities not just the ones that we see in person, but our online communities as well,” she adds.

“Policing changes continually, demands evolve and we have different challenges all the time – our job is to evolve with it.”
If you are a parent, Ubisoft games are now a threat to your children’s future.

If your kid tells someone he wants to “kill them” in game they could report them to the police and hand all their private info over to authorities, even if they’re in another country.

The solution to in-game “toxicity” for all time has been the mute button and/or growing a thick skin. The notion that Ubisoft would call the police on their users is an absolute disgrace.

Ubisoft partnered with the pro-censorship Anti-Defamation League in 2020 to fight so-called “hate speech” and “toxicity” in gaming.

The ADL’s program for Ubisoft and other gaming companies revolves around spying on gamers, encouraging companies to ban users for espousing “hate speech” and “white supremacy,” expanding in-game reporting systems to ban users for their speech and lobbying governments to change their laws to jail gamers for their online speech.

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Ubisoft is now following the ADL’s agenda to a T.

Wikipedia has a full list of all Ubisoft games which parents and gamers can use to boycott their trash company.
fork

Post by fork »

viata wrote: February 13th, 2023, 15:42
Just avoid playing shit games from devs like Ubisoft.
Just ignore this and it'll go away.

Fuck no, downvote every Ubishit game you got (gifted ofc) on any platform and write a review mentioning this as the main reason.
Tell everyone. Complain to local politicians etc. This worldwide tyranny is getting scarier by the week.
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Post by Dead »

Ubisoft was chosen to be the vanguard to face the first wave of backlash because it's a shit company that has nothing else going for it anyway.
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Post by viata »

fork wrote: February 13th, 2023, 16:33
Maybe, but soon it won't be just UK and Ubisoft..
No problem for me, I only play retro games 99% of the time I get to play something. I'll have no problem if it becomes 100%.
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Post by Acrux »

I find this no surprise. I bet eventually they'll even try to use things like this to separate children from parents.

Remember - these people hate you. They want you broke, dead, your kids raped and brainwashed, and they think it's funny.
fork

Post by fork »

GhostCow wrote: February 13th, 2023, 18:08
Imagine thinking complaining to politicians will do anything when this is what they wanted
If enough people did it, it could work.
But since everyone is as disillusioned as you (and me), it's been a constant ride towards hellish dystopia for decades.

But it's starting to get kinda dangerous. Time to rethink the strategy and try to do something? No?
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Post by GhostCow »

fork wrote: February 13th, 2023, 18:26
GhostCow wrote: February 13th, 2023, 18:08
Imagine thinking complaining to politicians will do anything when this is what they wanted
If enough people did it, it could work.
But since everyone is as disillusioned as you (and me), it's been a constant ride towards hellish dystopia for decades.

But it's starting to get kinda dangerous. Time to rethink the strategy and try to do something? No?
I think you are misreading me here bro. They can literally do anything they want because no one is willing to use violence to stop them. We are all living under jew controlled governments that are actively trying to genocide us. People like that are not going to give a shit about your phone calls or protests.

To quote a good personal friend of mine:
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Post by Scrooge »

So it's okay when games more or less subtly tell kids that they are born in the wrong body because they like to climb trees as a girl or play with dolls as a boy and that mutilating their bodies and taking hormones is totes fine, but telling someone who's non-BiNaRy that he's an attention seeking faggot is basically second degree murder?
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Post by SharkClub »

Ubisoft wanting to be on the right side of history is a pretty damn good joke considering they're one of the big shitter companies filling games for children with microtransactions, NFTs and gambling. Clown world.
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Post by JarlFrank »

Scrooge wrote: February 13th, 2023, 23:33
So it's okay when games more or less subtly tell kids that they are born in the wrong body because they like to climb trees as a girl or play with dolls as a boy and that mutilating their bodies and taking hormones is totes fine, but telling someone who's non-BiNaRy that he's an attention seeking faggot is basically second degree murder?
Subtly?
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Post by Eyestabber »

Woah, that's a big 180 from Ubishit. A couple years back I was playing a lot of For Honor and regularly calling my opponents pieces of trash, failed abortions, niggers and so on. Never got so much as a warning, other dudes confirmed to me BM in FH was 100% inconsequential. Clownworld, clownworld never changes.
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