I AM HYPERBOLE huahahaha
I get what you're saying Puzzlemaker, and I'd agree with your less-hyperbolic viewpoints but today I'm feeling like being an ass. Sorry everyone!
What I was trying to say about the tax thing, was that paying the tax on the goods happens at the seller level, and when they add tax to your receipt they're just trying to add a fee to help recoup their tax burden. Sales tax is a tax on the seller, not on the buyer, although the
de facto result is the seller forcing the buyer to spend extra to cover it.
If I buy a hat in the US and all applicable US taxes are paid for the sale, and I mail the hat to my friend in Nigeria, that transfer of goods is not a sale but a gift. I don't know but it makes sense that there are laws regulating gifts across national borders - and if there aren't, then why regulate? It would be like the post office handing back the box with the hat in it telling me they can't send it because it's a gift.
If there's a law regulating it, is it a law in the US about sending gifts, and/or a law in Nigeria about receiving gifts? If there's a 10% tax on receiving but nothing about sending, it seems like what needs to happen is that I send my Nigerian friend the hat and he needs to pay 10% of the hat's value on his tax return next year.
If there's a tariff, and it needs to be paid when the exchange happens, then that's pretty damn easy to code into Steam. Treat it like a purchase in the amount of the tariff.
In reality I think what the people in charge are thinking is that
(1) let's just screw over some users and we can get away with it because they're used to paying more and getting less (no blood or swastikas in German games, no children in the Fallout 2 European release, Australians generally paying a lot more and getting much later release dates),
(2) it's easy to just default to $1 = 1 Euro,
(3) we know we're still making more than the exchange rate - and we'd be upset if we made LESS than the exchange rate,
and
(4) we don't want to actually deal with the complex and ever-changing accounting landscape in every country where people use Steam,
(5) we might see more sales if people can't gift or trade across national boundaries.
What are some positive, benevolent, selfless reasons we can think of for the current scheme?