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ESO Logs: Invasive or Useful?

  • Alienoutlaw
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    Invasive
    It'll likely be used as a measuring stick, a bar to entry.

    "Show us your datalog! If you don't have (these stats) you can't play with us!"

    FFXIV players use a third party system. Technically not allowed, but the devs let it slide, which is fair enough. However, some folk are so toxic (and I hate using that word) that they will ceaselessly pester someone if their parses are not good enough. It is so bad at times that it has become something of a meme over there.

    Fortunately, it seems ESO's system will be more personally "controllable", aka not automatically published online for all to see.

    destiny 2 players have a similar system with the same problem, its used as a roadblock
  • VaranisArano
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    It'll likely be used as a measuring stick, a bar to entry.

    "Show us your datalog! If you don't have (these stats) you can't play with us!"

    FFXIV players use a third party system. Technically not allowed, but the devs let it slide, which is fair enough. However, some folk are so toxic (and I hate using that word) that they will ceaselessly pester someone if their parses are not good enough. It is so bad at times that it has become something of a meme over there.

    Fortunately, it seems ESO's system will be more personally "controllable", aka not automatically published online for all to see.

    Its actually not very controllable by players in the Log, from what we know from @Kihra

    You can set yourself to Anonymous and hide your name, which is not the default.

    But beyond that, anyone in group with you can log the encounter and upload that log. That log can be Public (anyone can see it), Unlisted (anyone with the URL can see it), or Private (anyone in the "guild" can see it).

    In short, it appears that anyone can log any enounter and share the logs with whoever they like.

    Your options is to set yourself to anonymous (not the default, as far as we've heard), or if you later want to remove your character names, you have to make an account and claim your characters.

    This is why I think Anonymous needs to be the default. What happens to the Logs after they are uploaded is entirely the decision of the Logger - you don't get any say in it except to set yourself to anonymous. The options make it clear that even "unlisted" or "Private" logs could be seen by quite a few people.

    I'm trying to reserve judgment about the potential for abuse until it ends up on the PTS, but I have to admit I'm curious how ESO Logs intends to prevent people from creating a guild like "Post Hilariously Bad Parses Here!"
  • anitajoneb17_ESO
    anitajoneb17_ESO
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    Invasive
    Kihra wrote: »
    Just read the ToS of that website, where it's stated that our personal data WILL be collected (including ID, browsing data, etc.) and WILL BE SHARED/SOLD to third parties.

    Note, you're misreading my site's Privacy Policy. It's just standard boilerplate language for showing ads on a Web site (e.g., Google AdSense). The only personal data the site collects is your email address for signup (and your ZOS account name if you choose to claim characters on the site). These are not shared with anyone. The email address is only used for account identification and to send signup and password reset emails, just like any other Web site with accounts.

    I'm looking for a nice way to say "I don't believe you" but cannot find any. Sorry. This isn't personal though : I don't believe any site no matter how loud they claim to value privacy.
  • Alienoutlaw
    Alienoutlaw
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    Invasive
    Kihra wrote: »
    Just read the ToS of that website, where it's stated that our personal data WILL be collected (including ID, browsing data, etc.) and WILL BE SHARED/SOLD to third parties.

    Note, you're misreading my site's Privacy Policy. It's just standard boilerplate language for showing ads on a Web site (e.g., Google AdSense). The only personal data the site collects is your email address for signup (and your ZOS account name if you choose to claim characters on the site). These are not shared with anyone. The email address is only used for account identification and to send signup and password reset emails, just like any other Web site with accounts.

    not being rude but you cant have a "boilerplate" privacy policy and say that its not binding if its including within your T&C's then we have to assume thats the case, if it not the case then i strongly recommend re-writing them so they are accurate and factual
  • Alienoutlaw
    Alienoutlaw
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    Invasive
    "Public Content: Your contributions to the Service are intended for public consumption and are therefore viewable by the public, including your game logs. Your account profile is also intended for public consumption, as is some of your other activity through the Service, like your uploaded game logs"

    just gonna leave this here i think it says everything i need to say

    secondly very interesting the date stated on the site
    ESO Logs Privacy Policy
    Last Updated on May 25, 2018.

    This Privacy Policy is effective immediately for users that sign up for accounts on or after May 25, 2018 and will become effective on May 25, 2018 for users that already have accounts.

    makes you wonder................
  • idk
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    Ogou wrote: »
    SaltySudd wrote: »
    Also, here is an excerpt from the ToS that everyone playing the game agreed to:

    "By creating an Account, You agree that You do not own the Account, any user names created on the Account, any Content stored or associated with an Account (such as digital and/or virtual assets, achievements, virtual currency, and other Downloadable Content), or related data associated with the Account."

    This is not YOUR data. You agreed to this the moment you accepted the ToS to play the game.

    EULA or ToS =/= Law.
    EU has recent laws that would probably shred this to pieces, should it come to a legal fight.

    Which laws? As far as I know there is no such thing.

    GDPR.

    While I agree that Zos is not implementing this the right way I do not think there is any personally identifiable information in game that could lead to a violation of GDPR.

    Zos is just committing a violation of common sense.
  • Shawn_PT
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    I don't like being told 'you're not good enough'. I don't like people looking at my DPS/build/achievements and saying 'with your CP/gear/class/race you MUST pull at least xK DPS. If you can't, git gud and come back later, noob.'

    I have met one person in my over 3 years of ESO. ONE. That took a bit of time to show me how to improve and helped me go from not feeling good enough for vet to being confident enough in my DPS to jump into the hardest stuff the game can throw at me and not be afraid of falling short. I can't pull 50K DPS but I can pull more than enough to get things done. And that's what is important.


    One.


    This won't make more people help those who are underperforming. This will only help singling them out and punting them from the groups.

    Yeah, I have little faith in the community :tongue:
  • Cpt_Teemo
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    Shawn_PT wrote: »
    I don't like being told 'you're not good enough'. I don't like people looking at my DPS/build/achievements and saying 'with your CP/gear/class/race you MUST pull at least xK DPS. If you can't, git gud and come back later, noob.'

    I have met one person in my over 3 years of ESO. ONE. That took a bit of time to show me how to improve and helped me go from not feeling good enough for vet to being confident enough in my DPS to jump into the hardest stuff the game can throw at me and not be afraid of falling short. I can't pull 50K DPS but I can pull more than enough to get things done. And that's what is important.


    One.


    This won't make more people help those who are underperforming. This will only help singling them out and punting them from the groups.

    Yeah, I have little faith in the community :tongue:

    Yeah the major problem is everyone just wants to speed run the hardest content i'm sure its doable with 20k dps but everyone wants 50k or so for the hardest one just to get it done faster
  • Kihra
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    Useful
    "
    Last Updated on May 25, 2018.

    That's actually a bug. Thanks for pointing it out. (It's using the last modified date of Warcraft Logs by accident). Will fix, thanks.
  • Alienoutlaw
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    Invasive
    i thought with all the class,racial and cp balancing this game was a play who you want how you want??
    ZOS seem to have lost that core ideal where now if you dont watch a certain yuotube and get their gear and build you have no place doing content you paid for. half the achievments in game are far beyond the mortal players and kept that way by an increasingly toxic elite, maybe instead of a log we should address the imbalance of the content itself
  • bharathitman
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    Why are some people bringing up complicated legal stuff to defend their viewpoints? It's not as if you can sue ZOS or your raid group if they ask for your combat data.

    Let's be very clear, you do not own your combat data or the data that you generate while playing the game including your character names. Everything is provided in an 'as is' basis and you are free to not play ESO if you don't agree. There is nothing special about the tool, cmx gives you similar data. If you are doing 75% of the group dps in a dungeon then you can be sure that something is wrong, cmx tells you that already.

    Let's stop being outright defensive and see how the tool actually functions, most of the people here are crying over nothing.
  • DyingIsEasy
    DyingIsEasy
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    Useful
    Shawn_PT wrote: »
    I don't like being told 'you're not good enough'. I don't like people looking at my DPS/build/achievements and saying 'with your CP/gear/class/race you MUST pull at least xK DPS. If you can't, git gud and come back later, noob.'

    I have met one person in my over 3 years of ESO. ONE. That took a bit of time to show me how to improve and helped me go from not feeling good enough for vet to being confident enough in my DPS to jump into the hardest stuff the game can throw at me and not be afraid of falling short. I can't pull 50K DPS but I can pull more than enough to get things done. And that's what is important.


    One.


    This won't make more people help those who are underperforming. This will only help singling them out and punting them from the groups.

    Yeah, I have little faith in the community :tongue:

    Statistics 101: ALWAYS give us your n. Ofc you will only get help from on person if you ask only one person.

    I have yet to see someone not getting help with his/her build rotation on Alcasts Discord within a day.
    And guess what the people helping always ask for: CMX screenshot
  • Pevey
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    Invasive
    idk wrote: »
    Ogou wrote: »
    SaltySudd wrote: »
    Also, here is an excerpt from the ToS that everyone playing the game agreed to:

    "By creating an Account, You agree that You do not own the Account, any user names created on the Account, any Content stored or associated with an Account (such as digital and/or virtual assets, achievements, virtual currency, and other Downloadable Content), or related data associated with the Account."

    This is not YOUR data. You agreed to this the moment you accepted the ToS to play the game.

    EULA or ToS =/= Law.
    EU has recent laws that would probably shred this to pieces, should it come to a legal fight.

    Which laws? As far as I know there is no such thing.

    GDPR.

    While I agree that Zos is not implementing this the right way I do not think there is any personally identifiable information in game that could lead to a violation of GDPR.

    Zos is just committing a violation of common sense.

    I wasn't sure about this either, but someone earlier posted the relevant snippet from the actual regulation, and it does specifically extend to pseudonyms or online avatars, which would mean character names in this case.
    Edited by Pevey on April 13, 2019 4:39PM
  • Alienoutlaw
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    Invasive
    [/quote]

    So much this.

    Plus, it makes me wonder if this Studio is trying to lose a lot of the playerbase, because this looks like a very good move to achieve that. What a crap move.

    [/quote]

    cheap fix for the EU server overload issues lol
    :)
  • Ratzkifal
    Ratzkifal
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    Invasive
    Why are some people bringing up complicated legal stuff to defend their viewpoints? It's not as if you can sue ZOS or your raid group if they ask for your combat data.

    Let's be very clear, you do not own your combat data or the data that you generate while playing the game including your character names. Everything is provided in an 'as is' basis and you are free to not play ESO if you don't agree. There is nothing special about the tool, cmx gives you similar data. If you are doing 75% of the group dps in a dungeon then you can be sure that something is wrong, cmx tells you that already.

    Let's stop being outright defensive and see how the tool actually functions, most of the people here are crying over nothing.

    @bharathitman I think people just don't like the idea that other people can constantly track their performance and talk behind their backs about them. Honestly, I don't like that idea myself. That people are bringing up complicated legal stuff is simply because there exist quite a few regulations on data storage already. Looking at the German data protection law, it's clearly stated that giving your consent to ZOS to collect your data does not equal or infer granting ZOS the permission to give that data to others or making it accessible to them. Only an immediate permission by you to the third party gives the third party the right to access this data. And yes, as far as the legal text goes, this does extend to usernames and to data connected to your username that otherwise only you would have access to, like your dps and build etc.
    However if the system was changed so that everyone is annonymous on default, then this would be a lot less problematic. Maybe even make it so that only your friends can see your data if you so wish.

    I do think that this tool is a great idea and can lead to serious player performance improvements for those who take the time to analyze their data, but I also hope that it is implemented in such a way that nobody has to feel like they are being watched constantly.
    This Bosmer was tortured to death. There is nothing left to be done.
  • Grandma
    Grandma
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    Useful
    I see that there's concern that fake "elite" groups that actually suck can use it to hate on people, but they're already a problem instead of the new feature. I think the tool is great for leaderboard groups and people who are pushing progression and want to positively see where people can improve, rather than just guessing based on how the pull went. You also can't use it live, so if someone is going to rage at you they can't be sure until after the encounter is over and done with.
    GH / 3/04/2021 / Elemental Catalyst Necromancer
  • Androconium
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    Oh great. Cambridge Analytica Dungeon Gestapo.

    ^^ serious concern.
    Do we get subliminal how-to-vote cards next?
  • FierceSam
    FierceSam
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    Invasive
    M
    FierceSam wrote: »
    FierceSam wrote: »
    You "opt in" by joining the group. That is your consent. Don't like other people seeing your stats? Join with friends only. If you're that worried about other people seeing exactly what you're doing don't worry. A group will already have a very good idea of your skills. This only adds a number to it.

    So wrong in so many ways.

    It should be MY choice whether ANYONE else, friend, guildmate, or pugger gets to see my numbers. This toxic system doesn’t even let me know they’re recording them.

    If I want you to know I will tell you.

    That's exactly how it works though.

    No it isn’t.

    Once activated by a single player, it secretly records all the data from your group irrespective of whether you ask or tell the others that you are doing this. It allows YOU to secretly view my performance without my permission and then do anything you want with my performance data.

    It neither informs me that this is being done, nor provides me with any way of viewing, amending or deleting my data.

    It then squirrels the data away on a third party website, allowing THEM to gather data on all players and do whatever they please with it.

    If that doesn’t worry you to some extent I politely suggest you haven’t thought it through.

    It doesn't let anyone view your performance if you are set to anonymous.

    WRONG.

    It records everything.. irrespective of whether I have consented or even know about it. it simply removes my name from the data. It will display it as Tank or DD 1 leaving you to clearly deduce my identity. ZOS might refer to this as anonymous data, but it is not, it is data that can be clearly and easily linked to individual users.

    It then allows whoever recorded it, along with whoever runs this website and anyone else who has access to it to do ANYTHING THEY WANT with it. It provides players with no redress and no way of stopping the process.

    The potential for bullying and intimidation this tool offers is immense. You only have to look at the many threads and posts on the subject of “why my group’s dps was so poor when I am so clearly fantastic” or “I am fed up of carrying people in PUGs” to see how toxic this will be.

    Equally you only have to look at the many “I don’t want to do ANY group content because I feel I will get abused” posts to see what effect it might have on newer players..

    You think it’s hard getting healers or tanks to PUG now? Good luck getting any of them to bother once this carcinogenic tool materialises.
  • muh
    muh
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    Useful
    Oh well...

    It would really be nice if people calling it invasive or toxic would actually spent a minute to understand how it actually works.

    First of all someone who wants to use it has to register on the website and download a program that allows them to upload the logs at all. It's not automatic.

    Now if they start logging combat data it will write all that juicy text that no sane human would bother to read onto their drive. They then have to start the program and upload the log the game created. Since they can grow pretty big in size it can take a couple minutes to upload. The log will then be queued on esologs to be processed on the servers used by ESO Logs, Warcraft Logs and FF Logs. So this takes additional time. When it's finally their turn, it once again takes time until it is processed and ready to be consumed by the person who did upload them. We're talking minutes here.

    Now here is the most important thing most of you seem to fail to understand.
    On the website itself no one has access to the plain text log, so if you're setting yourself to anonymous (which should be default), no one on the internet will or should be able to trace a log back to you.

    If you honestly expect that someone would go through all of this in a random group to *** on you or anyone you're fooling yourself.
    It's already much much much easier to figure out if someone is doing a good job as e.g. DD with the use of addons like Combat Metrics that show total group DPS. It's even easier to see if a tank or healer does their job without the need for an addon at all.

    It is an incredibly useful tool for combat analysis, getting a DPS number for an individual is the least useful information it provides.
    Edited by muh on April 13, 2019 5:58PM
  • Hallothiel
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    Invasive
    Just curious to ask under GDPR legislation, would this not need an Information Sharing Agreement to be published, as this is 3rd party website & not Zos.

    I would then have to give my Explicit Consent to opt in to this - consent cannot be assumed - especially as the data is not totally anonymised - and be able to demand to have access to whatever data that site may hold on me and for it to be deleted at my request.
  • majulook
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    Invasive

    It is probably a great tool for those high competitive guilds and those that play with friends of that want to do so.

    The default option for this should be anonymous and let those that want to see there data enable it.

    I really would like to see it not record if you if set to anonymous but I guess that's out of the question as the Web Site Dev says it will break the logs making then useless. IMHO this logging will just make it more difficult for the non-competitive players to get in a group to do content, as those that want to use this will probably not want to play with those that do not want it.

    I just hope it does not add to the toxicity, but based on reading all the threads on this it sure seems like it will.

    For those that do not know the log files are on the PC side. There is a checkbox in-game that says you don't want your name included in logs. If that's checked, then what's put in logs is just an empty name field and an anonymous character id, so the log doesn't know who you are, and by extension, my site doesn't know who you are.

    This makes it a very quick check of the logs to see who is set to anonymous, and any repercussions at that point will only make the game more toxic and divide the player base more than it is now.

    Si vis pacem, para bellum
  • Jhalin
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    Useful
    Jhalin wrote: »
    Gythral wrote: »
    GDPR ???

    I do not give permission for my data to be available on a 3rd party website.

    And I have no control over data uploaded by others, from which my DATA can be interpolated (Group Boss fights where someone did not turn it off etc)

    Please get over yourself. No one’s coming after “your” data from combat actions in a video game, which you do actually give ZOS permission to distribute by agreeing to the TOS. Your account isn’t even technically yours.

    Besides that, nothing about a combat encounter can give real life info. It’s not telling people your email, or telling them your full legal name, or sharing addresses, or telling them your shopping habits. What are you worried someone is going to find in these logs?

    It’s for endgame players, and really any players who wants to perform their role better will find use in it. Everyone else will see no difference in their gaming experience. Chill the hell out

    Stop saying “my account isn’t mine” you sound like a broken record.

    Secondly: some people actually BOUGHT the physical disc of ESO. Shocker. So is it not their property then?

    The physical disk is, the account made with it is still not yours. Nothing you do within the game is yours. None of the digital items are yours. Your characters’ names aren’t yours. You have zero ownership of anything within the game.

    So in the purest sense, none of your data is being shared, because by agreeing to the ToS you acknowledge that all data created on their servers is the property of ZOS
  • CMDR_Un1k0rn
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    Invasive
    Jhalin wrote: »
    Jhalin wrote: »
    Gythral wrote: »
    GDPR ???

    I do not give permission for my data to be available on a 3rd party website.

    And I have no control over data uploaded by others, from which my DATA can be interpolated (Group Boss fights where someone did not turn it off etc)

    Please get over yourself. No one’s coming after “your” data from combat actions in a video game, which you do actually give ZOS permission to distribute by agreeing to the TOS. Your account isn’t even technically yours.

    Besides that, nothing about a combat encounter can give real life info. It’s not telling people your email, or telling them your full legal name, or sharing addresses, or telling them your shopping habits. What are you worried someone is going to find in these logs?

    It’s for endgame players, and really any players who wants to perform their role better will find use in it. Everyone else will see no difference in their gaming experience. Chill the hell out

    Stop saying “my account isn’t mine” you sound like a broken record.

    Secondly: some people actually BOUGHT the physical disc of ESO. Shocker. So is it not their property then?

    The physical disk is, the account made with it is still not yours. Nothing you do within the game is yours. None of the digital items are yours. Your characters’ names aren’t yours. You have zero ownership of anything within the game.

    So in the purest sense, none of your data is being shared, because by agreeing to the ToS you acknowledge that all data created on their servers is the property of ZOS

    I may have voted invasive, but the above is also true.

    Everything you do on ZOS servers is ZOS property.
    In-game username: Un1korn | Happy member of the PCNA UESP guild (Resident Daggerfall Covenant enjoyer) | Main & basically only character: Crucian Vulpin, Imperial Dragonknight of the Daggerfall Covenant, and Undaunted Bulwark (I tank) | Mountain bike enjoyer and vulpine appreciator | If you know me from PCEU: No | To ZOS: THANK YOU FOR LETTING ME BRING MY HORSE INTO BATTLE!
  • Reistr_the_Unbroken
    Reistr_the_Unbroken
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    Invasive
    Jhalin wrote: »
    Jhalin wrote: »
    Gythral wrote: »
    GDPR ???

    I do not give permission for my data to be available on a 3rd party website.

    And I have no control over data uploaded by others, from which my DATA can be interpolated (Group Boss fights where someone did not turn it off etc)

    Please get over yourself. No one’s coming after “your” data from combat actions in a video game, which you do actually give ZOS permission to distribute by agreeing to the TOS. Your account isn’t even technically yours.

    Besides that, nothing about a combat encounter can give real life info. It’s not telling people your email, or telling them your full legal name, or sharing addresses, or telling them your shopping habits. What are you worried someone is going to find in these logs?

    It’s for endgame players, and really any players who wants to perform their role better will find use in it. Everyone else will see no difference in their gaming experience. Chill the hell out

    Stop saying “my account isn’t mine” you sound like a broken record.

    Secondly: some people actually BOUGHT the physical disc of ESO. Shocker. So is it not their property then?

    The physical disk is, the account made with it is still not yours. Nothing you do within the game is yours. None of the digital items are yours. Your characters’ names aren’t yours. You have zero ownership of anything within the game.

    So in the purest sense, none of your data is being shared, because by agreeing to the ToS you acknowledge that all data created on their servers is the property of ZOS

    Again: If someone bought a PHYSICAL COPY of the disk: it’s their property. Not ZoS’s
  • thedude33
    thedude33
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    Invasive
    No idea what this is about
  • Hippie4927
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    Invasive
    Again: If someone bought a PHYSICAL COPY of the disk: it’s their property. Not ZoS’s


    The disk is your property but not the software on the disk. Have you never read what you agree to when you buy and download software?

    PC/NA/EP ✌️
  • Jhalin
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    Useful
    Jhalin wrote: »
    Jhalin wrote: »
    Gythral wrote: »
    GDPR ???

    I do not give permission for my data to be available on a 3rd party website.

    And I have no control over data uploaded by others, from which my DATA can be interpolated (Group Boss fights where someone did not turn it off etc)

    Please get over yourself. No one’s coming after “your” data from combat actions in a video game, which you do actually give ZOS permission to distribute by agreeing to the TOS. Your account isn’t even technically yours.

    Besides that, nothing about a combat encounter can give real life info. It’s not telling people your email, or telling them your full legal name, or sharing addresses, or telling them your shopping habits. What are you worried someone is going to find in these logs?

    It’s for endgame players, and really any players who wants to perform their role better will find use in it. Everyone else will see no difference in their gaming experience. Chill the hell out

    Stop saying “my account isn’t mine” you sound like a broken record.

    Secondly: some people actually BOUGHT the physical disc of ESO. Shocker. So is it not their property then?

    The physical disk is, the account made with it is still not yours. Nothing you do within the game is yours. None of the digital items are yours. Your characters’ names aren’t yours. You have zero ownership of anything within the game.

    So in the purest sense, none of your data is being shared, because by agreeing to the ToS you acknowledge that all data created on their servers is the property of ZOS

    Again: If someone bought a PHYSICAL COPY of the disk: it’s their property. Not ZoS’s

    :rolling_eyes: Yes, the disk is yours, but that’s all you can claim ownership of
  • anitajoneb17_ESO
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    Again: If someone bought a PHYSICAL COPY of the disk: it’s their property. Not ZoS’s

    How's is that relevant ?
    I mean, relevant in general... it seems pretty obvious that, in an online game with megaserves owned by the company, you don't "own" your characters and such, because there's nothing you can do with them without the servers..; the day the servers shut down, everything's gone, no matter how much time and crowns you invested in ESO.

    But also, how is that relevant to the topic at hand ? My characters, gear and houses may not be my property, but the things I do in the game, the time I spend in it, the conversations I have with other players, and my combat statistics are, OF COURSE, private data. ZOS is free to analyze it (every company is entitled to analyze the behaviour of their customers in their relevant field), but if ZOS sold our gamer profiles to other companies for money, it would of course be a major breach of privacy. And, of course, it is a major breach of basic common sense.

    How would you feel is you got a pop-up advertisement, or an email, from, say, Nividia (rhetorical example), like this :
    "Hi, Player ! We've heard from ZOS that you've played 2000 hours of ESO on a GTX670, you should consider upgrading to our latest 1080 product ! And also since you've achieved great performances in ESO, you may be interested by Game XYZ.... "
    Well, that's already what happens, albeit more discreetely, with targeted ads, and that's what our combat log data can/could be used for on a small third party side collecting and keeping that information. Note, I'm not saying they do nor will, but I'm saying they can.

    TLDR : Ingame assets are not my property, but my behaviour in the game and my player profile are private data.

  • LiquidPony
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    This thread is a hoot.

    Never change, ESO Forums. Never change.
  • Ratzkifal
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    thedude33 wrote: »
    No idea what this is about

    @thedude33 On the last ESO live they presented a new feature that allows you to keep track of your and your group's performance. It collects all damage data and keeps track of your positions in throughout the instance. You can see graphs and icons move through the map of the dungeon while simultaneously checking out who was doing what when. This feature only works after the run is completed on a third party website so it can't be used to kick someone right there if they aren't dealing enough damage.
    However you can't exactly opt out of the feature and can get your stats recorded and published against your will. You can choose to become anonymous, but that will only hide your name and nothing else, which still allows people who ran with you to determine your identity and talk badly about your lacking skill behind your back.
    This thread discusses whether this feature is more useful or invasive.
    I believe it is leaning on the invasive side as the feature to remain anonymous is not the default setting. It'll be up for testing on PTS on the 15th.
    This Bosmer was tortured to death. There is nothing left to be done.
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