I think this is what started the discussion as we couldn't verify the gold was paid.Be glad you are talking about an ethical player who has paid you, rather than somebody just taking them and walking off
From the sounds of it there was no written rules for the guild bank or the individual concerned either wouldn't have done it, or you could just point to the rules and say 'see... not allowed'.
If you think certain rules should be in place then its often good to have them written down and communicated in a way that there can be no confusion, and officers can then act if those rules are broken.
The absence of written rules instantly renders pretty much all actions as acceptable.... humans all see things differently, and unless you specifically state what is/isn't allowed then you have to accept that stuff will happen.
In the absence of a written rule being broken it sounds like the player in question has acted ethically by paying for the items... especially if they paid over the market value for them.
Be glad you are talking about an ethical player who has paid you, rather than somebody just taking them and walking off
Yesterday, two members in a guild I belong to were having a discussion about one taking all the recipes from the bank (to supply his newly found guild) and claimed to have deposited gold to the guild for the transaction (we have no way of verifying this).
From the sounds of it there was no written rules for the guild bank or the individual concerned either wouldn't have done it, or you could just point to the rules and say 'see... not allowed'.
If you think certain rules should be in place then its often good to have them written down and communicated in a way that there can be no confusion, and officers can then act if those rules are broken.
The absence of written rules instantly renders pretty much all actions as acceptable.... humans all see things differently, and unless you specifically state what is/isn't allowed then you have to accept that stuff will happen.
In the absence of a written rule being broken it sounds like the player in question has acted ethically by paying for the items... especially if they paid over the market value for them.
Be glad you are talking about an ethical player who has paid you, rather than somebody just taking them and walking off
By this logic, the absence of a law makes it all good to do something unethical.
From the sounds of it there was no written rules for the guild bank or the individual concerned either wouldn't have done it, or you could just point to the rules and say 'see... not allowed'.
If you think certain rules should be in place then its often good to have them written down and communicated in a way that there can be no confusion, and officers can then act if those rules are broken.
The absence of written rules instantly renders pretty much all actions as acceptable.... humans all see things differently, and unless you specifically state what is/isn't allowed then you have to accept that stuff will happen.
In the absence of a written rule being broken it sounds like the player in question has acted ethically by paying for the items... especially if they paid over the market value for them.
Be glad you are talking about an ethical player who has paid you, rather than somebody just taking them and walking off
By this logic, the absence of a law makes it all good to do something unethical.
jaschacasadiob16_ESO wrote: »I always see guilds aggressively recruiting in the zone chats.
- All of them have 490 members.
- All of them have a trader in either Wayrest, Mournhold or Elder Root.
- All of them require no fees.
- All of them have many activities.
Once you join you find out that all the above is just BS. It's recruiting for the sake of recruiting.
Guild chats often end up violating ToS, discriminating people based on gender, sex preferences, color and stuff.
Guild banks are often robbed by people who don't give a damn about others. People who unilaterally decide that since they donate 5 gold they can take anything they want. Well, some don't even donate. Simply because they hosted trials they think the guild owes them.
How can you have a trust system in place when you recruit like that?
And why are you surprised anyway?
Start recruiting by sponsorship only. Where people are responsible of whoever they invite.
xilfxlegion wrote: »it would be nice if someone cleaned out all of the green recipes in our guild banks. makes more room for stuff people can actually use.
Yesterday, two members in a guild I belong to were having a discussion about one taking all the recipes from the bank (to supply his newly found guild) and claimed to have deposited gold to the guild for the transaction (we have no way of verifying this).
As the highest ranking member online, I offered my two cents about the transaction, but the person who "paid" for the recipes insists they've done nothing wrong as they deposited gold.
My reply was "The recipes aren't about making gold. They're for players to do their daily writs, or acquire common-but-not-easily-found blues and purples. They're not to be taken to start a new guild, no matter what the cost."
The player replied they paid far more than "market value" for the recipes (which were all green level), but I said this was not the point.
I replied:
"The bank is built on a trust system. Taking things from the bank doesn't require a deposit, but the honor system depends on players will make more deposits to help out and draw when they need, not want, to. By taking the recipes, you're validating the need to your new guild, not this one. Please restore the recipes withdrawn from the bank. I will message the guild officers to restore your gold once it's been proven you did deposit. We are not here to fund other guilds."
The person indicated the recipes had already been sold, but still questioned their action on why it was wrong.
So I decided to enlist the help of the members of the community.
Was it wrong for this person to take the recipes despite paying more than market value to set up their own guild?
Don't get me wrong, I wouldn't feel comfortable with what they did either in my guild... but it sounds like there is a clear absence of organisation from the guild side in setting any rules, and you can't just take that out on a player who has seemingly shown consideration by paying for something. In the players eyes all they have done is bought some items fair & square from the guild bank. They haven't even just taken them for free... THEY PAID!
Guild banks are tricky things due to the lack of controls & options from ZoS... you have to be very clear and careful on how you manage them. It doesn't sound like this guild has any leadership structure there thats doing that.
They are just green recipes. If this person was an outright thief, it would be different. Your views may differ, but it's best to remain cordial and instead of trying to force views upon one another. Ask him not to perform similar actions in the future. It's just a game and he didnt rob anyone.
(trimming your post to keep it simple)Exalted_Goose wrote: »Assuming that no rules are written clearly in the OP's guild regarding the subject matter...