paladin181: With fraud protection, usually the vendors (places people use the card) are the ones who have to eat the costs. The bank doesn't and the card owner obviously doesn't. Our business lost over $10k due to a stolen card being used to buy from us. It really sucked.
Since when has GOG really cared about good customer service? Or a functioning website with clear and logical utilities? Or anything resembling competent site design?
IMHO GOG has always cared about customer service and generally done a better job than most companies I've ever dealt with on or off line. Providing great customer service doesn't mean that 100% of your customers are 100% happy 100% of the time and that all of their problems can be dealt with immediately or even non-immediately however. They're human, have limited finite resources and try to do the best they can as an honest business IMHO. They're not perfect and have their flaws like any of us do.
I agree that the website is not always functional, and there are quirks here and there in the site, in Galaxy, and other things too, and I get irked by it at times too (and often comment about it, such as being irked about the stupid anti-fraud thing), but everything in life has problems, every business will have problems and it is a part of life to more or less expect that there will be problems occasionally when dealing with any company. I accept that this can happen, and even that some companies (such as my ISP for example) might have a rude employee on tech support some day when I call or similar because they're human and flawed too (although I've never had experiences like that with GOG personally). What is more important to me than having a flawless Mr. Rogers experience with everything working 100% perfect 100% of the time and everyone having a coke and a smile, is that when problems inevitably do occur that they are eventually rectified to customer satisfaction. Now I don't expect that to be 100% either because of the real world, but it is more about the overall experience to me. As long as something that goes wrong eventually does get fixed or handled in some way even if it isn't perfect, then I might grumble about some things but I'll still be overly satisfied.
It's kind of like holiday dinner with one's dysfunctional family, people bicker about this and that but everyone loves each other at the end of the day so to speak.
So I think GOG cares, and cares more than most companies seem to, but I think they do try hard to run a good business that puts the customer first as much as possible but also within the confines of their own limitations and decisions, and realizing that even if one has the best of intentions when making decisions they don't always work out flawlessly. That's particularly true with computer software design and engineering, and that includes web coding. Again, I'll grumble about some flaws like anyone would, but if I was in a bar with the GOG staff, I'd grumble at them over a few things while buying them beers and patting them on the back. :)
HypersomniacLive: I was having some water when I read this. Thanks for making me snort it!
I don't think I got the wording 100% exact, but while humourous, I've seen error messages from "rpm" and other commands over time for real. Most likely just bad exit code handling, but still it makes you do a double take and say "huh? wha???" :)