I think you'd be wrong.
Surely it can? if steam is running whilst playing the game?
A gamr like counter strike, for example.

Steam can't detect pirated games and ban you for it, and I doubt massively that such a feature would ever be implemented (humongous legal grey area).
Personally, I wouldn't care if they did, the pirate leeches deserve it imo.![]()

Steam can't detect pirated games and ban you for it, and I doubt massively that such a feature would ever be implemented (humongous legal grey area).
Personally, I wouldn't care if they did, the pirate leeches deserve it imo.![]()
Isn't that what EA/Bioware already do?Well, by that basis, I don't like your post, lets ban your steam account...
They need to get a lot more creative on tackling piracy, its just so easy nowadays. I like the always on connection but then you get people screaming about it PLUS its cracked in a heartbeat. Piracy is always quoted as a driver for primary console development and the PC getting stiffed with poor ports.
But no, there is no way Steam would detect a pirate game on your hard drive, we would have heard about such an 'invasion of provacy' a long time ago.
Isn't that what EA/Bioware already do?
Piracy may not equal to lost sale but it is stealing nonetheless (you could also argue that stealing a car from a dealership isn't equal to a lost sale). You use something you have not bought/been given the right to use.
I can't beleive anyone still uses this argument. I am going to explain this very slowly, in the hope that you are the last person left who hasn't heard it.
Stealing. A. Car. Deprives. The. Owner. Of. That. Car.
To equate to "real life" theft, the original owner must be deprived of something that they would have had, if your actions had not taken place. If "Tim" downloads something made by "Ben", then Ben is only worse off by the implied theory that Tim owes Ben the value that would normally be charged for this "thing". Ben still has his thing, he is still able to sell his thing. He is not missing anything that he had before Tim downloaded the thing.
I do want to be clear, I'm not saying that pirating is morally correct, I don't deny that in many instances that Tim is downloading something that Ben created, and that he does not want him to download, however, I am sick to death of this deeply flawed argument.