monktoasty wrote: »That's the problem with such a group..it can't be sufficiently ran without being corrupt.
People should always use their own best judgement when dealing with other players..simply believing some group who is good or bad is not the way
jrmn78ii7883 wrote: »I heard of this Facebook group a while back and initially thought it was a great idea. It is a group whose purpose is supposedly to help those who have been scammed in ESO. It supposedly helps people by keeping, updating and maintaining a blacklist of alleged scammers in order to raise awareness. I have heard anecdotal evidence from people who have claimed that the administrator of the group has done things in an unfair manner like putting people on this list without sufficient proof. These players have had difficulty enjoying the economic aspects of this game because of this blacklist.
This group has become very popular which gives this admin a lot of power to discipline other players.
I have noticed that the people who run the game have wisely made every effort to prevent any player from being able to punish or discipline other players. So my question is this...
Does this Facebook group give its group administrator the power to punish and discipline other players?
LadyLethalla wrote: »Plus... even IF it was totally legit, not everyone is on Facebook? Like I keep telling everyone, FB is eeeeeeeeeeeeeeevillllllll...
jrmn78ii7883 wrote: »I heard of this Facebook group a while back and initially thought it was a great idea. It is a group whose purpose is supposedly to help those who have been scammed in ESO. It supposedly helps people by keeping, updating and maintaining a blacklist of alleged scammers in order to raise awareness. I have heard anecdotal evidence from people who have claimed that the administrator of the group has done things in an unfair manner like putting people on this list without sufficient proof. These players have had difficulty enjoying the economic aspects of this game because of this blacklist.
This group has become very popular which gives this admin a lot of power to discipline other players.
I have noticed that the people who run the game have wisely made every effort to prevent any player from being able to punish or discipline other players. So my question is this...
Does this Facebook group give its group administrator the power to punish and discipline other players?
1) A gullible person doesn't know they are and is unlikely to go looking for a list of scammers; nongullible people tend not to get scammed
2) the last place smart people would ever hang out is FB
3) since no one has ever heard of this group, given the gossipmongering drama queen trolls inhabiting these forums we'd have heard of it if there was some whining, I suspect that in fact no one has been affected by false accusations there
4) are you a scammer?
LadyLethalla wrote: »Plus... even IF it was totally legit, not everyone is on Facebook? Like I keep telling everyone, FB is eeeeeeeeeeeeeeevillllllll...
Couldn't agree more. There are many, many reasons I don't like Facebook, but did you know that these days if you don't have a Facebook page, HR departments consider you an axe murderer?
Not kidding.
phaneub17_ESO wrote: »How do they investigate whether someone is actually scammed or just being vindictive towards another player?
jrmn78ii7883 wrote: »I heard of this Facebook group a while back and initially thought it was a great idea. It is a group whose purpose is supposedly to help those who have been scammed in ESO. It supposedly helps people by keeping, updating and maintaining a blacklist of alleged scammers in order to raise awareness. I have heard anecdotal evidence from people who have claimed that the administrator of the group has done things in an unfair manner like putting people on this list without sufficient proof. These players have had difficulty enjoying the economic aspects of this game because of this blacklist.
This group has become very popular which gives this admin a lot of power to discipline other players.
I have noticed that the people who run the game have wisely made every effort to prevent any player from being able to punish or discipline other players. So my question is this...
Does this Facebook group give its group administrator the power to punish and discipline other players?
1) A gullible person doesn't know they are and is unlikely to go looking for a list of scammers; nongullible people tend not to get scammed
2) the last place smart people would ever hang out is FB
3) since no one has ever heard of this group, given the gossipmongering drama queen trolls inhabiting these forums we'd have heard of it if there was some whining, I suspect that in fact no one has been affected by false accusations there
4) are you a scammer?
jrmn78ii7883 wrote: »I heard of this Facebook group a while back and initially thought it was a great idea. It is a group whose purpose is supposedly to help those who have been scammed in ESO. It supposedly helps people by keeping, updating and maintaining a blacklist of alleged scammers in order to raise awareness. I have heard anecdotal evidence from people who have claimed that the administrator of the group has done things in an unfair manner like putting people on this list without sufficient proof. These players have had difficulty enjoying the economic aspects of this game because of this blacklist.
This group has become very popular which gives this admin a lot of power to discipline other players.
I have noticed that the people who run the game have wisely made every effort to prevent any player from being able to punish or discipline other players. So my question is this...
Does this Facebook group give its group administrator the power to punish and discipline other players?
1) A gullible person doesn't know they are and is unlikely to go looking for a list of scammers; nongullible people tend not to get scammed
2) the last place smart people would ever hang out is FB
3) since no one has ever heard of this group, given the gossipmongering drama queen trolls inhabiting these forums we'd have heard of it if there was some whining, I suspect that in fact no one has been affected by false accusations there
4) are you a scammer?
If you think the page is violating the code of conduct, then direct it to the official Facebook page. They can investigate, and, if needed, have the page taken down.
Nocturnal_Annoyance wrote: »I've never seen anyone added to that list without screenshots of the scam being uploaded. Generally chat convos and whatever evidence is needed to support the claim (if it's a cod scam for example, a shot of the mail showing the wrong item, example flour instead of dust). When someone even tries to report someone without sufficient evidence the peeps in the group jump on it asking for the additional proof. (Speaking of the ps4 page - dunno if there are crime watch pages for other platforms).
LadyLethalla wrote: »Plus... even IF it was totally legit, not everyone is on Facebook? Like I keep telling everyone, FB is eeeeeeeeeeeeeeevillllllll...
Couldn't agree more. There are many, many reasons I don't like Facebook, but did you know that these days if you don't have a Facebook page, HR departments consider you an axe murderer?
Not kidding.
Couldn't agree more. There are many, many reasons I don't like Facebook, but did you know that these days if you don't have a Facebook page, HR departments consider you an axe murderer?
Not kidding.
FloppyTouch wrote: »Lol people still use fb?
Couldn't agree more. There are many, many reasons I don't like Facebook, but did you know that these days if you don't have a Facebook page, HR departments consider you an axe murderer?
Not kidding.
jrmn78ii7883 wrote: »I heard of this Facebook group a while back and initially thought it was a great idea. It is a group whose purpose is supposedly to help those who have been scammed in ESO. It supposedly helps people by keeping, updating and maintaining a blacklist of alleged scammers in order to raise awareness. I have heard anecdotal evidence from people who have claimed that the administrator of the group has done things in an unfair manner like putting people on this list without sufficient proof. These players have had difficulty enjoying the economic aspects of this game because of this blacklist.
This group has become very popular which gives this admin a lot of power to discipline other players.
I have noticed that the people who run the game have wisely made every effort to prevent any player from being able to punish or discipline other players. So my question is this...
Does this Facebook group give its group administrator the power to punish and discipline other players?
jrmn78ii7883 wrote: »I heard of this Facebook group a while back and initially thought it was a great idea. It is a group whose purpose is supposedly to help those who have been scammed in ESO. It supposedly helps people by keeping, updating and maintaining a blacklist of alleged scammers in order to raise awareness. I have heard anecdotal evidence from people who have claimed that the administrator of the group has done things in an unfair manner like putting people on this list without sufficient proof. These players have had difficulty enjoying the economic aspects of this game because of this blacklist.
This group has become very popular which gives this admin a lot of power to discipline other players.
I have noticed that the people who run the game have wisely made every effort to prevent any player from being able to punish or discipline other players. So my question is this...
Does this Facebook group give its group administrator the power to punish and discipline other players?
Mention group/page not normally mentioned on the forum a lot - check.
Give initial positive vibe - check.
Mention it was "heard of" or "some say" or "they said" to give cover distance buffer zone - check.
Toss minor questioning shade about maybe mighta don't know stuff - check.
End up asking question so it might provoke a click - check.
Five-by-five on the promote with escape chute ready checklist.
Well done.