Read it again. Ori didn't make it clear in what order he did things. He said things happened in the first minute of setting Steam into Offline mode but not whether they continued or what it was all about.
Steam has a setting in its settings screen which says "offline mode" - I checked that as per the description on the steam site.
I restarted the computer.
I started steam.
It attempted an internet connection.
Then it asked me if I wanted to go online.
Of course its asking you every time if you want to go online and even tells you that its set to offline mode while asking you. My gripe has has been said multiple times is that
- if you set it to stay offline
- it will tell you its offline
- but will still connect
There are a host of software that have automatic updating or other calling home functions - every single one of those which are installed on my machine when set to stay offline does so - Steam doesn't and there is no setting short of using third party software or disconnecting from the internet that prevents it from calling home. Worse they tell you it stays offline when it doesn't.
I don't believe it transmits and downloads anything bad - unless someone finds a way to misuse this feature - but I expect software to behave as it says it does. The screen you mention about it always asking says:
"Steam is currently set to offline mode. Many features such as friends and the Server Browser will not be available offline"
and then gives you two choices:
Go online / Start in Offline Mode
This screen even tells the user that the program is offline - even though it is only offline if it doesn't find an active internet connection.
Again to reiterate:
I have no problem with steam calling home. I have a problem with steam telling the user it won't and even offering a specific setting to make sure it stays offline - but then going ahead and calling home anyways. Its not a way to make users trust a company - if they have nothing to hide, why are they trying to do so?
(Disclaimer: I don't believe that Steam collects any data it doesn't disclose somewhere and I have no qualms using Steam - and if Civ5 happens to be a good game which we'll hopefully get to know in the near future I'll likely buy it - but I do feel that a company that misleads its consumers about its data collection does put itself into a very bad light regarding its trustworthiness)