it always confused me as to why it was against some games TOS to prevent "naming and shaming"
but is this not one of the best ways for the community to police itself?
public disgrace (despite the classic trolls saying they don't care) is one of the oldest punishments in the book, there is no physical pain or tangible action taken (like account suspension or what have you) and yet its incredibly embarrassing for the individual.
Judas Helviaryn wrote: »Witch hunts aren't policing the community. They're personal vendettas made public via goading and misinformation.
You may feel like you'd be honest, but no community can suffer vigilantism without harming innocent people.
Judas Helviaryn wrote: »Witch hunts aren't policing the community. They're personal vendettas made public via goading and misinformation.
You may feel like you'd be honest, but no community can suffer vigilantism without harming innocent people.
If you showed proof of a ratio that no one can get manually to those using bots i'm sure you can tell the difference.
it always confused me as to why it was against some games TOS to prevent "naming and shaming"
but is this not one of the best ways for the community to police itself?
public disgrace (despite the classic trolls saying they don't care) is one of the oldest punishments in the book, there is no physical pain or tangible action taken (like account suspension or what have you) and yet its incredibly embarrassing for the individual.
No, it shouldn't be allowed.
You can't be certain that 100% of the people that are named and shamed are actually at fault for anything.
it always confused me as to why it was against some games TOS to prevent "naming and shaming"
but is this not one of the best ways for the community to police itself?
public disgrace (despite the classic trolls saying they don't care) is one of the oldest punishments in the book, there is no physical pain or tangible action taken (like account suspension or what have you) and yet its incredibly embarrassing for the individual.
its a very basic concept, the idea that the system tries to protect individuals identities or actions that are clearly harmful, hurtful, or cheating only further leads to the toxic environment that games are being so heavily criticized for today.
if someone is deliberately cheating to make themselves appear better, but everyone finds about it and spreads the information, and it becomes widely known that a person is a cheater do you think there going to get the same satisfaction out of cheating when everyone just shrugs it off and is like "well yeah but your a cheater. . ."
if people are cheating, being abusive, trolling, hacking, etc. I think it should be fine to call them out on it, if ZOS wants to do something about it as well that's fantastic, but I think letting the community police itself by calling out these individuals and publicly humiliating them is fair game.
anitajoneb17_ESO wrote: »it always confused me as to why it was against some games TOS to prevent "naming and shaming"
but is this not one of the best ways for the community to police itself?
public disgrace (despite the classic trolls saying they don't care) is one of the oldest punishments in the book, there is no physical pain or tangible action taken (like account suspension or what have you) and yet its incredibly embarrassing for the individual.
Wait until you're publicly accused, named and shamed while being innocent. Because someone wants to tease you. Or to troll you. Or to take some revenge. Or simply hates you.
The only reason naming and shaming is not allowed is that it would be used against innocent - and the forum would turn into battlefields of people being accused, defending themselves, people taking sides, etc...
Real Life history is full off innocent people burnt alive because "the crowd asked for it".
it always confused me as to why it was against some games TOS to prevent "naming and shaming"
but is this not one of the best ways for the community to police itself?
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