GDPR- What Valve knows about you - YouTube

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GDPR (General Data Protection Regulation) rolls out today, meaning that companies need
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to share with you any personally identifiable information that they’ve collected about
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you.
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Putting aside the spam of emails we’ve all received, and how creepy some of this information
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is, it’s a big win for us.
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And Valve have 2 interesting pages that you’ll want to check out.
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In the video’s description.
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The first is CS:GO’s.
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Go to your GAMES, click on Personal Game Data and you can see all of the information they’ve
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been storing about you.
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They know the last time you played Arms Race was in 2016.
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They know everybody you’ve ever reported, and what you’re accusing them of.
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Your loadout and equipped skins.
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Your pick’em predictions.
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How you did in the last operation.
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How few drops you got from watching majors.
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Who you like to play with, your latency to locations around the world, and more.
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Commendations shouldn’t come as a surprise, because if you’re like me then you’ve
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tried commending a friend only to be told you’ve already done it.
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But still, it comes as a bit of a surprise to see all of this information presented to
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you in such a comprehensive manner.
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There’s information about every match you’ve played since last October.
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Which map was played, who you played with, what the scores were… and even the wait
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time before the match started.
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And if this sounds like something you’re really interested in knowing, you should check
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out csgostats.gg which has been around for a while, allowing you to upload your matches
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for an analysis.
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Back to GDPR, although them knowing all this information about you can be scary, fortunately,
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this is a privacy update, not a massive reveal to all, so it’s not like anybody can view
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your data.
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Only you.
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And Valve.
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There’s an anti-addiction counter.
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Dota2 warns you when you’ve been online for an unhealthy amount of time, but CS:GO
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does not.
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But what IS this number?
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Is it the amount of time you’ve unhealthily spent on CS:GO in total?
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How concerned Valve is about you?
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The amount of times they’ve put you in horribly 1-sided games to try and get you to stop playing?
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…Nope, nothing so sinister.
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It’s the amount of time CS:GO was loaded for the last time you played it.
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Although since they know your match history, they might still be doing those things.
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So that’s for CS:GO.
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There are also pages like this for DOTA2, TF2… and even Portal 2, though that’s
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not quite as comprehensive as the others.
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But there’s more: you can also see your Steam account history from this page which
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contains a link to pretty much EVERY BIT OF STEAM EVER MADE.
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This page helped me to realise how vast the Steam platform is, and how little of it I
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know of, let alone use.
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Not all of this is new, but it’s good to have it all in one place and I have immediately
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bookmarked this page- a lot of these pages seem difficult to find otherwise.
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There’s no way I can cover all of these links in this video.
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But here are a few of my favourites: You can see all stored chatlogs here with
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everybody you’ve spoken to on Steam.
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This only seems to record the last few conversations you’ve had with them, or if you’ve had
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a long chat, only the last few dozen messages of that.
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And nothing is dating back more than 2 weeks.
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It’s worth checking this page out just to get a feel for how much is recorded and for
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how long after it’s been said.
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The mobile settings page has to be the stupidest looking part of Steam.
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You can see the obscene amount that you’ve spent on your Steam profile if you want to
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feel bad.
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All of this dates yesterday, suggesting that this is a new page created to comply with
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GDPR, so it will be interesting to see if it splits up future transactions separately.
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Family Sharing lets you see who you’ve given access to your account and have since forgotten
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about.
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As well as the last time they abused your forgetfulness by signing in!
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Don’t worry- it’s easy to revoke their access.
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You can see all of the comments you’ve made on profiles dating back to 2012!
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…and any outgoing emails you’ve generating dating back to 2007 for me!
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A bit like with the CS:GO reports, you can see which profiles you’ve reported, as well
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as the comment you accompanied the accusation with.
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And hey, look at that- I got a ban without realising.
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There was a spammy, scammy skin group that banned me for ‘spam’.
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Awesome.
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But is all this enough for Steam to comply with GDPR?
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What about your Trust Factor?
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Will any more information be made available to you?
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And to that I say: I don’t know.
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While I may be a CS:GO Youtuber, it doesn’t immediately make an expert on GDPR.
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This is complicated stuff that even large companies with their own legal teams, such
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as Google and Facebook, are struggling to comply with.
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I’m going to ASSUME that Valve knows more about it than I do and that their privacy
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policy (also linked in the description) abides by these new rules.
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But it falls outside of my comfort zone to talk about with any degree of certainty.
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I’ll link a few things in the video’s description, so you can see what GDPR aims
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to achieve and what you’re entitled to.
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Take the right to be forgotten, for example.
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Although I don’t know for sure, it probably doesn’t mean you can ask Valve to delete
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your match history every time you lose a game.
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In Steam’s Privacy policy right now, it says that you can be forgotten…
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provided you delete your Steam account.
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You probably won’t want to do that.
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Saying that, I’m sure that you will have valid questions about the grey-areas in GDPR
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that will need clarifying.
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But please, don’t come to me with these.
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Hopefully somebody else more knowledgeable than myself will come along who will know
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the answers.
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You can see a summary of GDPR’s goals on this page, which I’ll link to in the video’s
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description should you want to know more.