Androconium wrote: »MetalHead4x4 wrote: »You have to know people are gonna try and infiltrate groups such as this to harass you.
Yes, that's because YOU think that its acceptable.That's the real problem.
- It isn't the person making the derogatory comment.
- It isn't the person that takes offense.
- It's YOU saying that you accept it as normal.
TheShadowScout wrote: »...anyone else thinking that a "guild activity" page showing who set the message just like who put someting into the bank or withdrew something and such would be a good idea?
.
The other day someone in my guild replaced an officer's note with a phrase that constitutes sexual harassment. Of course we immediately edited the perms so no one except officers has the ability to edit notes (because there is a glaring omission of an option to allow people to edit only their own notes, which would have precluded this mess), but the person apparently remains in guild because we cannot identify them.
Upon reporting this to Customer Support, with a screenshot of the note, I asked Support to let us know who had done this or (understanding their privacy concerns) that they simply remove the offender from guild, as we have no way of identifying the person unless they choose to confess, which has not happened. It's incredibly discomfiting to know we have this person in guild and cannot identify or remove them ourselves.
In their response, Support argued that they would never take any action on behalf of a guild master and that they would not investigate or remove anyone from guild because participating in guild is a "voluntary" activity and removing someone from guild would be "interfering." The response also said that if I had an account name, they would investigate. The problem, as I explained to them, is that they are the only ones who can find out the at name, as there are no records of note changes available to players. I gave as much information as we could provide. It is now incumbent upon them to investigate, as they have proof of an offense, and to take action to prevent further harassment, which we would certainly do ourselves if only we could.
I'm not sure how one justifies a complete lack of investigation and action here on the grounds that guild is a "voluntary" activity (isn't the whole game?) and that removing a sexual harasser from guild would be "interfering." It is hardly "interfering" with guild officers when those very officers have asked Support to find out what they cannot and to help them take action to protect their own safety. As for "voluntary," we have chosen to be in a guild, yes; we have most definitely not chosen to be sexually harassed. To hear Support suggest that they go hand in hand is sickening.
Incident #181006-000437
@ZOS_GinaBruno @ZOS_JessicaFolsom @ZOS_GaryA @ZOS_BillE @ZOS_MichaelServotte
The other day someone in my guild replaced an officer's note with a phrase that constitutes sexual harassment. Of course we immediately edited the perms so no one except officers has the ability to edit notes (because there is a glaring omission of an option to allow people to edit only their own notes, which would have precluded this mess), but the person apparently remains in guild because we cannot identify them.
Upon reporting this to Customer Support, with a screenshot of the note, I asked Support to let us know who had done this or (understanding their privacy concerns) that they simply remove the offender from guild, as we have no way of identifying the person unless they choose to confess, which has not happened. It's incredibly discomfiting to know we have this person in guild and cannot identify or remove them ourselves.
In their response, Support argued that they would never take any action on behalf of a guild master and that they would not investigate or remove anyone from guild because participating in guild is a "voluntary" activity and removing someone from guild would be "interfering." The response also said that if I had an account name, they would investigate. The problem, as I explained to them, is that they are the only ones who can find out the at name, as there are no records of note changes available to players. I gave as much information as we could provide. It is now incumbent upon them to investigate, as they have proof of an offense, and to take action to prevent further harassment, which we would certainly do ourselves if only we could.
I'm not sure how one justifies a complete lack of investigation and action here on the grounds that guild is a "voluntary" activity (isn't the whole game?) and that removing a sexual harasser from guild would be "interfering." It is hardly "interfering" with guild officers when those very officers have asked Support to find out what they cannot and to help them take action to protect their own safety. As for "voluntary," we have chosen to be in a guild, yes; we have most definitely not chosen to be sexually harassed. To hear Support suggest that they go hand in hand is sickening.
Incident #181006-000437
@ZOS_GinaBruno @ZOS_JessicaFolsom @ZOS_GaryA @ZOS_BillE @ZOS_MichaelServotte
I don't see how anyone's "safety" is in jeopardy here. So you are exaggerating just a tad and it's hurting the seriousness of your argument.
One of my guilds curtailed the note function because of nasty things being written anonymously as well. So it's an issue the developers should address. But let's not over blow it and act like this is putting people in danger. That's absurd.
Changes to Notes could show up in the History, then they'd have nowhere to hide.
Salvas_Aren wrote: »I think this task is not as simple as one might think.
The support has to do a quite tough and rather unwanted job when it comes to the decision whether one's harassment justifies a ban or not.
Now they should decide whether some sort of harassment justifies guild excommunication, but not game ban?
Furthermore, remember the privacy concerns. They can't tell you who did it, but you expect them to kick ONE guildie, while the kick would end up in the guild records, visible to all officers?
Salvas_Aren wrote: »I think this task is not as simple as one might think.
The support has to do a quite tough and rather unwanted job when it comes to the decision whether one's harassment justifies a ban or not.
Now they should decide whether some sort of harassment justifies guild excommunication, but not game ban?
Furthermore, remember the privacy concerns. They can't tell you who did it, but you expect them to kick ONE guildie, while the kick would end up in the guild records, visible to all officers?
This has nothing to do with support deciding on banning someone. Guilds are free to decide who they want to associate with. You are a member of a guild entirely at the discretion of the guild leader and the officers the guild leader has empowered.
Support doesn't have to decide whether an alleged harassment justifies "guild excommunication" - the guild is free to decide that on their own, as is their right. You wouldn't force a guild to keep a guild member they didn't want if they knew their name - no matter what the reason was that the guild didn't want them as a member. Guilds don't have to keep members they don't want. This is a fundamental function of a guild. It's a defining function. The guild leader simply wants to know who took control of a guild wide feature and used it to do something inappropriate and unacceptable to the terms of participation in that guild. If the tools are missing for a guild leader to monitor use of a guild wide feature then the devs should change that and in the mean time support should... support the guild leader in this.
And also, Do you really believe it's your birthright to not be offended? Really?
Mystrius_Archaion wrote: »Salvas_Aren wrote: »I think this task is not as simple as one might think.
The support has to do a quite tough and rather unwanted job when it comes to the decision whether one's harassment justifies a ban or not.
Now they should decide whether some sort of harassment justifies guild excommunication, but not game ban?
Furthermore, remember the privacy concerns. They can't tell you who did it, but you expect them to kick ONE guildie, while the kick would end up in the guild records, visible to all officers?
This has nothing to do with support deciding on banning someone. Guilds are free to decide who they want to associate with. You are a member of a guild entirely at the discretion of the guild leader and the officers the guild leader has empowered.
Support doesn't have to decide whether an alleged harassment justifies "guild excommunication" - the guild is free to decide that on their own, as is their right. You wouldn't force a guild to keep a guild member they didn't want if they knew their name - no matter what the reason was that the guild didn't want them as a member. Guilds don't have to keep members they don't want. This is a fundamental function of a guild. It's a defining function. The guild leader simply wants to know who took control of a guild wide feature and used it to do something inappropriate and unacceptable to the terms of participation in that guild. If the tools are missing for a guild leader to monitor use of a guild wide feature then the devs should change that and in the mean time support should... support the guild leader in this.
The only issue is the system of guild traders encourages adding as many people to the guild as possible and keeping them, working against those social consequences.
People don't often join guilds for friends in ESO and they don't kick if they can just put somebody on ignore or hide guild chat.
The guild trader system needs to be undone so that everyone has access to trading while they're offline and in any location they want for convenience so there is no incentive to ignore the social graces and consequences. People could finally guild with friends and leave toxic guilds easier then because they wouldn't feel obligated to stay.
witchdoctor wrote: »
witchdoctor wrote: »
Mystrius_Archaion wrote: »Salvas_Aren wrote: »I think this task is not as simple as one might think.
The support has to do a quite tough and rather unwanted job when it comes to the decision whether one's harassment justifies a ban or not.
Now they should decide whether some sort of harassment justifies guild excommunication, but not game ban?
Furthermore, remember the privacy concerns. They can't tell you who did it, but you expect them to kick ONE guildie, while the kick would end up in the guild records, visible to all officers?
This has nothing to do with support deciding on banning someone. Guilds are free to decide who they want to associate with. You are a member of a guild entirely at the discretion of the guild leader and the officers the guild leader has empowered.
Support doesn't have to decide whether an alleged harassment justifies "guild excommunication" - the guild is free to decide that on their own, as is their right. You wouldn't force a guild to keep a guild member they didn't want if they knew their name - no matter what the reason was that the guild didn't want them as a member. Guilds don't have to keep members they don't want. This is a fundamental function of a guild. It's a defining function. The guild leader simply wants to know who took control of a guild wide feature and used it to do something inappropriate and unacceptable to the terms of participation in that guild. If the tools are missing for a guild leader to monitor use of a guild wide feature then the devs should change that and in the mean time support should... support the guild leader in this.
The only issue is the system of guild traders encourages adding as many people to the guild as possible and keeping them, working against those social consequences.
People don't often join guilds for friends in ESO and they don't kick if they can just put somebody on ignore or hide guild chat.
The guild trader system needs to be undone so that everyone has access to trading while they're offline and in any location they want for convenience so there is no incentive to ignore the social graces and consequences. People could finally guild with friends and leave toxic guilds easier then because they wouldn't feel obligated to stay.
I agree with you 100% on this. But it's a whole different ball of wax. In the mean time I don't see any reason to exacerbate that by making it more difficult for guilds to police themselves on their own terms.
Mystrius_Archaion wrote: »Salvas_Aren wrote: »I think this task is not as simple as one might think.
The support has to do a quite tough and rather unwanted job when it comes to the decision whether one's harassment justifies a ban or not.
Now they should decide whether some sort of harassment justifies guild excommunication, but not game ban?
Furthermore, remember the privacy concerns. They can't tell you who did it, but you expect them to kick ONE guildie, while the kick would end up in the guild records, visible to all officers?
This has nothing to do with support deciding on banning someone. Guilds are free to decide who they want to associate with. You are a member of a guild entirely at the discretion of the guild leader and the officers the guild leader has empowered.
Support doesn't have to decide whether an alleged harassment justifies "guild excommunication" - the guild is free to decide that on their own, as is their right. You wouldn't force a guild to keep a guild member they didn't want if they knew their name - no matter what the reason was that the guild didn't want them as a member. Guilds don't have to keep members they don't want. This is a fundamental function of a guild. It's a defining function. The guild leader simply wants to know who took control of a guild wide feature and used it to do something inappropriate and unacceptable to the terms of participation in that guild. If the tools are missing for a guild leader to monitor use of a guild wide feature then the devs should change that and in the mean time support should... support the guild leader in this.
The only issue is the system of guild traders encourages adding as many people to the guild as possible and keeping them, working against those social consequences.
People don't often join guilds for friends in ESO and they don't kick if they can just put somebody on ignore or hide guild chat.
The guild trader system needs to be undone so that everyone has access to trading while they're offline and in any location they want for convenience so there is no incentive to ignore the social graces and consequences. People could finally guild with friends and leave toxic guilds easier then because they wouldn't feel obligated to stay.
Mystrius_Archaion wrote: »
It's not "more difficult for guilds to police themselves". I never argued for anything of the sort.
Mystrius_Archaion wrote: »I'm just saying that guilds aren't as restrictive of who they invite as they need to be so that they wouldn't need to kick anyone out and when they do need to kick someone aren't as willing to do so because the current system encourages "keeping every trading body" in the guild and getting more without any background.
Mystrius_Archaion wrote: »Guilds in ESO are like businesses hiring without background checks. The bank hired a convicted bank robber; the social guild invited a sociopath.
Imperial_Voice wrote: »Its a bit sad how many of you are asking ZoS to turn into the thought police and you know absolutely 0 details about what was even said. Youre just screaming for a ban based on the word of OP alone in a matter that should be policed within guilds.
This isn't anyone asking ZOS to be thought police. This has nothing to do with bans. You don't have any right to be in any particular guild. Guilds invite and accept you and police your participation on their own terms. That's definitional. Also, you don't get banned from the game when a guild removes you from their ranks. Obviously.
And it's worth noting here that this isn't merely the word of the OP as far as support is concerned. There is a textual record that support has access to. All the guild leader is asking is for support to tell them who used their guild tool to message the entire guild. That's something a guild leader should have access to on their own but they apparently don't. It's reasonable to ask support to fill that request and it's reasonable for support to do so.
It's also worth noting here that this isn't about the adjudication of an act of alleged sexual harassment and the OP isn't asking ZOS to step in and adjudicate that. This is about a guild choosing who its members are. No one is setting out to prove whether someone did something or whether that something amounts to a crime. The guild leader just wants to be able to tell who used a guild tool to do something that the guild has every right to decide is inappropriate for them.
^ All of that is entirely under the purview of the Guild Leader and NOT ZoS.
As such it is the Guild Leader's Responsibility as unfortunate as that may be to investigate and ensure they maintain the quality of player they seek.
Again Not ZoS's Responsibility.
If a Guild Leader cannot ensure the quality of its members then they should not allow those members access to tools that they might abuse and should limit the access of those tools to a lower population such as Officers by which the leader can limit such offenses. If a Guild Leader has not built the amount of relative trust associated with becoming an Officer with a player then that player simply shouldn't be allowed the position of Officer.
Again ^ Guild Leaders responsibility.
Imperial_Voice wrote: »Its a bit sad how many of you are asking ZoS to turn into the thought police and you know absolutely 0 details about what was even said. Youre just screaming for a ban based on the word of OP alone in a matter that should be policed within guilds.
This isn't anyone asking ZOS to be thought police. This has nothing to do with bans. You don't have any right to be in any particular guild. Guilds invite and accept you and police your participation on their own terms. That's definitional. Also, you don't get banned from the game when a guild removes you from their ranks. Obviously.
And it's worth noting here that this isn't merely the word of the OP as far as support is concerned. There is a textual record that support has access to. All the guild leader is asking is for support to tell them who used their guild tool to message the entire guild. That's something a guild leader should have access to on their own but they apparently don't. It's reasonable to ask support to fill that request and it's reasonable for support to do so.
It's also worth noting here that this isn't about the adjudication of an act of alleged sexual harassment and the OP isn't asking ZOS to step in and adjudicate that. This is about a guild choosing who its members are. No one is setting out to prove whether someone did something or whether that something amounts to a crime. The guild leader just wants to be able to tell who used a guild tool to do something that the guild has every right to decide is inappropriate for them.
^ All of that is entirely under the purview of the Guild Leader and NOT ZoS.
As such it is the Guild Leader's Responsibility as unfortunate as that may be to investigate and ensure they maintain the quality of player they seek.
Again Not ZoS's Responsibility.
If a Guild Leader cannot ensure the quality of its members then they should not allow those members access to tools that they might abuse and should limit the access of those tools to a lower population such as Officers by which the leader can limit such offenses. If a Guild Leader has not built the amount of relative trust associated with becoming an Officer with a player then that player simply shouldn't be allowed the position of Officer.
Again ^ Guild Leaders responsibility.
The guild leader doesn't have the tools to monitor comment changelogs. No one is asking ZOS to do anything but give them that tool.
Salvas_Aren wrote: »I think this task is not as simple as one might think.
The support has to do a quite tough and rather unwanted job when it comes to the decision whether one's harassment justifies a ban or not.
Now they should decide whether some sort of harassment justifies guild excommunication, but not game ban?
Furthermore, remember the privacy concerns. They can't tell you who did it, but you expect them to kick ONE guildie, while the kick would end up in the guild records, visible to all officers?
This has nothing to do with support deciding on banning someone. Guilds are free to decide who they want to associate with. You are a member of a guild entirely at the discretion of the guild leader and the officers the guild leader has empowered.
Support doesn't have to decide whether an alleged harassment justifies "guild excommunication" - the guild is free to decide that on their own, as is their right. You wouldn't force a guild to keep a guild member they didn't want if they knew their name - no matter what the reason was that the guild didn't want them as a member. Guilds don't have to keep members they don't want. This is a fundamental function of a guild. It's a defining function. The guild leader simply wants to know who took control of a guild wide feature and used it to do something inappropriate and unacceptable to the terms of participation in that guild. If the tools are missing for a guild leader to monitor use of a guild wide feature then the devs should change that and in the mean time support should... support the guild leader in this.
Imperial_Voice wrote: »Its a bit sad how many of you are asking ZoS to turn into the thought police and you know absolutely 0 details about what was even said. Youre just screaming for a ban based on the word of OP alone in a matter that should be policed within guilds.
This isn't anyone asking ZOS to be thought police. This has nothing to do with bans. You don't have any right to be in any particular guild. Guilds invite and accept you and police your participation on their own terms. That's definitional. Also, you don't get banned from the game when a guild removes you from their ranks. Obviously.
And it's worth noting here that this isn't merely the word of the OP as far as support is concerned. There is a textual record that support has access to. All the guild leader is asking is for support to tell them who used their guild tool to message the entire guild. That's something a guild leader should have access to on their own but they apparently don't. It's reasonable to ask support to fill that request and it's reasonable for support to do so.
It's also worth noting here that this isn't about the adjudication of an act of alleged sexual harassment and the OP isn't asking ZOS to step in and adjudicate that. This is about a guild choosing who its members are. No one is setting out to prove whether someone did something or whether that something amounts to a crime. The guild leader just wants to be able to tell who used a guild tool to do something that the guild has every right to decide is inappropriate for them.
^ All of that is entirely under the purview of the Guild Leader and NOT ZoS.
As such it is the Guild Leader's Responsibility as unfortunate as that may be to investigate and ensure they maintain the quality of player they seek.
Again Not ZoS's Responsibility.
If a Guild Leader cannot ensure the quality of its members then they should not allow those members access to tools that they might abuse and should limit the access of those tools to a lower population such as Officers by which the leader can limit such offenses. If a Guild Leader has not built the amount of relative trust associated with becoming an Officer with a player then that player simply shouldn't be allowed the position of Officer.
Again ^ Guild Leaders responsibility.
The guild leader doesn't have the tools to monitor comment changelogs. No one is asking ZOS to do anything but give them that tool.
OP is asking for ZOS to name the individual. Even by simply removing the player from the guild will expose who it was.
We're also assuming that harassment actually happened. Yes, I believe whatever was on the note was there. But it's just as possible the person edited their own note, no? Some people like guild drama, and will do anything to start it. Others like to play a victim even when they haven't been victimized. It's even within the scope of reason that someone could have done this to themselves to bring light the need for some badly needed guild improvements.