Video Games Seen Becoming a New Frontier in Digital Rights

Recently, a Hong Kong activist staged a protest against Beijing's rule inside a popular social simulator game called Animal Crossing.

Advertisement
By Reuters | Updated: 31 July 2020 18:32 IST
Highlights
  • Gaming industry is set to increase revenues to $300 billion by 2025
  • The game Minecraft has been used to circumvent censorship
  • A Hong Kong activist staged protest against Beijing in Animal Crossing

Game designers are tackling sensitive topics by creating games that involve social issues

Photo Credit: Reuters

Critical digital rights battles over privacy, free speech and anonymity are increasingly being fought in video games, a growing market that is becoming a "new political arena," experts and insiders said on Thursday.

With the industry set to more than double annual revenues to $300 billion (roughly Rs. 22.44 lakh crores) by 2025, questions about how video game operators, designers and governments handle sensitive issues take on added urgency, said participants at RightsCon, a virtual digital rights conference.

In recent months, a Hong Kong activist staged a protest against Beijing's rule inside a popular social simulator game called Animal Crossing, and a member of the US Congress, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, campaigned in the game as well.

Advertisement

The game Minecraft, meanwhile, has been used to circumvent censorship, with groups using it to create digital libraries and smuggle banned texts into repressive countries.

Advertisement

“Video games have become this new political arena," said Micaela Mantegna, founder of GeekyLegal, an Argentinian group that focuses on tech policy.

Also, game designers have been tackling sensitive topics by creating games that involve issues such as refugees or mental illness.

Advertisement

“Video games are a powerful way to start talking about topics that are hard to engage in real life,” said Stephanie Zucarelli, a board member of Women in Games Argentina, a non-profit group.

User rights can be at risk, however, of being violated, said Kurt Opsah, an attorney with the Electronic Frontier Foundation, a digital rights group.

Advertisement

Law enforcement can ask game companies their users' personal data, operating companies can censor game users and governments can pressure game operators and makers to remove content, he said.

He cited an example of the US military deleting critical comments that had been posted on recruitment channels it hosted on Twitch, a popular streaming platform.

"They didn't want people to have an anti-military view on their recruiting channel,” he said.

Governments can apply pressure on video game companies, he said, such as the case of Activision Blizzard Entertainment that last year suspended a player from a video game competition for making political comments about Hong Kong in an interview.

Blizzard is partly owned by Chinese gaming giant Tencent Holdings.

© Thomson Reuters 2020


Is Nord the iPhone SE of the OnePlus world? We discussed this on Orbital, our weekly technology podcast, which you can subscribe to via Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, or RSS, download the episode, or just hit the play button below.

Affiliate links may be automatically generated - see our ethics statement for details.
 

Get your daily dose of tech news, reviews, and insights, in under 80 characters on Gadgets 360 Turbo. Connect with fellow tech lovers on our Forum. Follow us on X, Facebook, WhatsApp, Threads and Google News for instant updates. Catch all the action on our YouTube channel.

Advertisement

Related Stories

Popular Mobile Brands
  1. Oppo Reno 15 Series India Launch Date, Price Range Leaked
  2. Samsung Drops Galaxy S26 Edge As Company Rethinks Ultra-Thin Phones: Report
  3. You Can Now Get Google One and Gemini Annual Plan for Half the Price
  4. Oppo K15 Turbo Pro Tipped to Launch With This MediaTek Chip
  5. Oppo Enco Buds 3 Pro+ Review: Packs a Punch on a Budget
  6. Realme Pad 3 5G to Launch Alongside the Realme 16 Pro Series
  7. Is Microsoft Really Planning to Rewrite Windows in Rust Using AI?
  8. ISRO's Baahubali Rocket Sends Heaviest Comms Satellite to Low Earth Orbit
  9. Samsung Galaxy TriFold Gets Folded 150,000 Times: Here's What Happened
  10. How Much Water Does AI Use? Consumption Now Exceeds World's Bottled Water
  1. Fact Check: Is Microsoft Really Planning to Rewrite Windows 11 in Rust Using AI?
  2. Oppo K15 Turbo Pro Tipped to Launch With New MediaTek Dimensity 9500s Chip
  3. Samsung 6K 3D Odyssey G9, Four Other Monitors Unveiled Ahead of CES 2026
  4. Crypto Markets Stay Range-Bound, Traders Wary as Liquidity Remains Thin
  5. Realme Pad 3 5G India Launch Date Announced; Will Arrive With 12,200mAh Battery
  6. ISRO’s LVM3 Rocket Successfully Launches US BlueBird Block-2 Satellite
  7. Google One, Gemini Annual Plan Prices Slashed By Half for Limited Period: Details
  8. Samsung Galaxy S26 Edge Plans Reportedly Dropped Amidst Poor Sales of Ultra-Thin Phones
  9. Samsung Galaxy Z TriFold Hinge Survives Around 150,000 Folds in Durability Test on YouTube
  10. 007 First Light Delayed by Two Months, Will Now Launch on May 27, 2026
Gadgets 360 is available in
Download Our Apps
Available in Hindi
© Copyright Red Pixels Ventures Limited 2025. All rights reserved.