https://t.co/P3f00FbJjY
재핑의 박인수가 웁스 창간호부터 폐간까지 연재했던 만화의 이름이 블라인드 가디언이었고 첫번째 챕터 제목이 아마 저니 쓰루 더 다크였을텐데.. 작가가 좋아하는 밴드와 곡이라 가져다 썼다고 했었다. 만화는 뭐 보여주기도 전에 잡지가 망해서 그만..
Exclusive:
Lawmakers from several political groups in the European Parliament have sent a letter to the European Commission calling for new laws to protect video games that people have paid for.
The main quote: “When nearly 1.3 million EU citizens are calling on the European Union to take action, it is our obligation to listen and to act. We cannot ignore this overwhelming call to action.
The plenary debate a few weeks ago sent a clear signal: This Citizen Initiative has broad cross-party support in the European Parliament. When consumers pay for a game, they invest more than just money.
They spend their time on it, make memories, develop passions and make real friends for life along the way. It is indefensible that publishers should have the right to simply pull the plug on these games at any time, and destroy cultural heritage in the process. With this letter, we reiterate our position: It’s Game Over for this abusive practice.”
The MEPs argue that companies should not be able to make paid games unusable after ending support through server shutdowns, forced updates, or other changes.
They make it clear that this is not about forcing publishers to keep servers running forever or provide endless updates. Instead, they want laws that ensure people can still access and play the games they bought, even after official support ends. They also encourage solutions such as private servers or peer-to-peer options when possible.
Signed by dozens of MEPs from across the political spectrum, the letter increases pressure on the European Commission to propose actual legislation protecting consumers and preserving access to purchased games.