Rules/Terms/Regulations for using STEAM (http://www.steampowered.com/v/index.php?area=subscriber_agreement)
5. ONLINE CONDUCT, CHEATING AND ILLEGAL BEHAVIOR
You agree that you will be personally responsible for the use of your Account and for all of the communication and activity on Steam that results from use of your Account. (1)Your online conduct and interaction with other subscribers should be guided by common sense and basic etiquette. Specific requirements may also be found in the Steam Online Conduct rules at http://steampowered.com/index.php?area=online_conduct, other Rules of Use, the Subscription Terms, or in terms of use required by third parties who host particular games or other services.
Steam and the Steam Software may include functionality designed to identify software or hardware processes or functionality that may give a player an unfair competitive advantage when playing multiplayer versions of any Steam Software, other Valve products, or modifications thereof ("Cheats"). You agree that you will not create or assist third parties in any way to create Cheats. You agree that you will not directly or indirectly disable, circumvent, or otherwise interfere with the operation of software designed to prevent or report the use of Cheats. You acknowledge and agree that either Valve or any online multiplayer host may refuse to allow you to participate in certain online multiplayer games if you use Cheats in connection with Steam or the Steam Software. Further, you acknowledge and agree that an online multiplayer host may report your use of Cheats to Valve, and Valve may communicate your history of use of Cheats to other online multiplayer hosts for Valve products. (2)Valve may terminate your Account or a particular Subscription for any conduct or activity that Valve believes is illegal, constitutes a Cheat, or which otherwise negatively affects the enjoyment of Steam by other Subscribers. You acknowledge that Valve is not required to provide you notice before terminating your Subscriptions(s) and/or Account, but it may choose to do so.
My thoughts on the Highlighted areas:
(1) - The use of "common sense and basic etiquette" is very broad and leaves Valve a lot of breathing room to enforce their policy. I feel that that wording they are using is poor judgement on their part because there are quite a few people (from my own personal experience) that have no clue what common sense is or how make use of basic etiquette. Think of this sentence as a legal loop-hole they can put in place to protect themselves when they ban/close accounts. The link to (click here) Steam's Online Conduct doesn't help out because it doesn't expand out enough on what they consider to be "common sense" or "basic etiquette" - it only brushes up on a few guidelines that can be expanded upon if needed when they ban/close an account.
(2) - Once again they leave in board terms here "for any conduct or activity that Valve belives is illegal, constitues a Cheat, or which otherwise negatively affects the enjoyment of Steam by other Subscribers." to help protect themselves. They fail to list or even provide a list of known ways to cheat for their Subscribers to see. We (the Subscribers) put our trust towards Valve blindly and assume they'll use good judgement when making decisions to ban/close an account.
Basically what it all boils down to is this:
As a company (Valve in this case) does not feel the need to spend the time, manpower or money to provide it's customers with satisfactory results/answers/solutions to the actions that the company makes. The company places in broad terms that protects them and then they can basically go "Ha, ha! Look what we can do and you can't fix it because you agreed to our Terms and Conditions when you signed up!" In the end, the customer is screwed one way or another and the company keeps on going on in their daily business like nothing bad has happened. The company's main goal is to make as big a profit as possible while providing a product that suites the needs of the majority of their customers.
To simply put my point: You're screwed and there's nothing you can do about it.
As for going to Small Claims Court, any judge that doesn't check into the company's terms and conditions that this issue would fall under is a pathetic excuse for a judge and they shouldn't be working as one. It took me a whole 2 minutes to find and read through Vavle's policy on banning accounts.
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