EU rejected Stop Killing Games initiative that would have allowed games to be played forever
Stop Killing Games initiative is a global grassroots organization that hopes to change legislations across the world in a way that would allow video games to remain playable forever - even after the game's servers have been shut down.
In practice, the demand would have been implemented so that in games that also offer a single-player mode, that single-player mode would also function completely without a connection to the game company's servers, meaning game companies could not simply shut down the game (but could shut down its network-dependent parts).
The campaign argued that the current practice no longer guarantees ownership of games after purchase, but is rather a one-time paid license that the game publisher can revoke at any time.
Through the campaign, over 1.2 million signatures were eventually collected, and the citizens' initiative was submitted to the European Union for consideration.
But unfortunately, the European Commission decided to reject (PDF) the citizens' initiative, meaning it will not proceed further in the EU's decision-making bodies.

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