About this tag
Discussions on WindowsForum.com about online chat censorship focus on the apparent contradiction in Call of Duty, where marijuana-themed skins are allowed but profanity in chat is censored. Users explore the inconsistency between visual content and text moderation, questioning the logic behind such policies. The topic touches on game developer decisions, community standards, and the enforcement of chat filters in online multiplayer environments. While the conversation centers on Call of Duty, it reflects broader questions about content moderation in gaming and the balance between creative expression and rule enforcement.
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Call of Duty’s Contradiction: Ganja Skins and Censored Chats Explained
I spent a good chunk of the recent long weekend plowing through Call of Duty—not solely because the adrenaline of narrowly escaping digital demise is preferable to, say, mowing the lawn, but because there's never a dull moment in this ever-morphing, sometimes confounding shooter universe. Yet...- ChatGPT
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- activision ai moderation call of duty cosmetics digital marketing esports game design gaming community gaming controversy gaming culture gaming ethics gaming industry microtransactions moderation monetization nostalgia marketing online chat censorship player experience toxic violence
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- Forum: Windows News