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Steam introducing optional chat filters for profanity and slursGet the f*** in
Get the f*** in

Valve plan to add optional profanity filters to Steam Chat, and it’ll also be able to filter language in games which use Steam’s own chat system. If you want to block effing, jeffing, and slurs, you’ll be able to fiddle with a load of settings and filters to add and remove words and otherwise fine-tune your chat civility. If you don’t want to filter chat, no worries, just don’t turn it on. This system debuts today as a Steam Labs experiment so Valve can gather feedback and improve it, then they plan to launch it as a regular Steam feature “soon.”
Valve say this builds on the chat filtering they made for games like Dota,CS:GO, andDestiny 2, turning it into a central part of Steam so the same rules apply to chat in the Steam client, mobile app, and any games which support it. You’ll still see everything you type, even if you have filters enabled, but filter-users receiving messages will see “♥♥♥” or “***” symbols replacing any words they forbid.
“With chat filtering, we’ve obscured the most offensive language shared on Steam,“Valve’s announcementexplains. “You can alter your settings to control whether profanity and slurs are displayed, and because each player’s tolerance for difficult words is unique, we’ve included the ability to add or remove words to form your personal filter. You may also upload lists of words or phrases from other sources, empowering groups and communities to work together to define and share your own sets of language guidelines. We believe this level of control is especially important given that language is constantly evolving and is used differently among various communities around the world. So with Steam chat filtering, we’ve made sure you can choose to filter language as much as you want, or not at all.”
Visit yourSteam account settingsto opt into Experiment 011’s filtering, if you want. Don’t if you don’t. It does also have an option to show profanity and slurs from people on your Steam Friends list but not strangers. Looks like this:

Valve explain that they’ve built two default lists of filtered language, one of strong profanity and one of common racial, religious, ethnic, and other slurs. And they have statistics!
If you’re a dev who wants this in your game, Valve point towardsthe Steamworks documentationto get started.