I am skeptical that this is the main reason (even though it's true and is a reason). I think people don't like the idea of having their games library split across multiple services, and don't like using/learning software they aren't familiar with, or that other people aren't using.
Otherwise why would anyone use software they aren't used to? Steam is really good, they've been putting massive resources into making it better for many years, and it has all the network effects.
My point is just that it doesn't make sense to criticize the question for not reading the article if the article doesn't answer the question, and what's really needed to answer it is additional context. The broad scope of Riot's statement could be construed to mean they could do more than just ban streamers for using hateful language.
Makes sense. I played Dota for some time and honestly that was one of the things I enjoyed about it, unreasonable people being furious with me while being totally helpless to do anything about it other than lose their shit. Although it's a dirty sort of enjoyment and makes things extremely awkward; on an emotional level what you want out of the match is for your teammates to fail, but you're obliged by the rules and a sense of sportsmanship not to throw, so even if you don't want to be dishonest about what you're doing it's hard to play seriously.
I think it would be cool if there was a moba that somehow formalizes the adversarial relationship you have with your team. Maybe like a Survivor esque battle royale setup; in the beginning it's 5v5, and you'll be advantaged by the success of your team, but ultimately you are going to have to betray them to win, and also the losers will have an opportunity to influence the outcome.
The biggest reason why not is that it requires the implementation of centralized tracking systems for everyone to confirm ID for accessing these services, which is a privacy nightmare and takes way too much agency away from individuals. If Reddit or something bans me for a stupid reason or because their broad brush modbots malfunctioned, I should be able to evade that ban with enough care and effort, and the government shouldn't help them make sure I can't. I should also have the ability to use social media pseudonymously without being subject to corporate tracking.
The other reason, of course, is that banning children from social media cuts them off from participating in society or having any sort of a public voice. That's fucked up too.
It's "open weights" if they are publishing the model file but nothing about its creation. There's some hypothetical security concerns with training it to give very specific outputs for certain very specific inputs but I feel like that's one of those kind of far fetched worries especially if you want to use it for chat or summarization and the comparison is getting AI output from a server API. Local is still way better.
Under both the
Prepetition TOS and the Current TOS, all right, title, and interest in and to X Corp.’s services,
including X Corp.’s various websites, SMS, APIs, email notifications, applications, buttons,
widgets, ads, commerce services, and other covered services (collectively, the “Services”) are X
Corp.’s “exclusive property.” See Prepetition TOS § 4; Current TOS § 4. X Corp., as the owner
of the Services, grants each user “a personal, worldwide, royalty-free, non-assignable and non-
exclusive license to use the software provided” to use the Services. See Prepetition TOS § 4
(emphasis added); Current TOS § 4 (same). In contrast to the Services, the account holders own
the Content (as defined in the TOS) they submit, post, or display on or through the Services;
however, the Content is distinct and separate from the Services.
So I guess the account itself is something they're saying is part of the Services X provides and is their property, while the stuff you post on the account is yours.
hm that is a good point