witchdoctor wrote: »witchdoctor wrote: »Just want to chime in as it relates to the debate regarding EU law and privacy concerns.
Terms of service are not laws - nor do they have the weight of law. So it really doesn't matter what a player agrees to when they sign up to play a game. If the actions violate the consumer protections of a certain country they are liable and vulnerable to lawsuits regardless of the ToS.
This is especially the case in ESO - which basically says they can do what ever they want in the ToS and that everything is subject to change. Courts have already thrown out Terms of Services in the past that were so open-ended and included provisions like that. Terms of Service are not > the law nor do they give companies free reign to violate the consumer protection or privacy laws in the country they are operating. That being said - I'm unfamiliar with European Law so I have no idea if such a log would actually violate their consumer protection or privacy laws or not (I rather doubt it to be honest). But if it does - then it does - and the ToS wouldn't change that.
I don't think anyone claims (seriously) that TOS supersedes law.
But I do claim that ZOS has far better access to legal advice then what passes as arm-chair lawyering around here.
That's not the impression I got. I've read several comments in this thread that seemed to be suggesting that the terms of service was the only thing that mattered.
Uh ... the only thing I saw that was putting TOS as the 'rule,' was the claim by one person that their physical purchase of the install disk entitled them to anything.
I think its fair to say, it does not.
Their purchase of the game entitles them to the same consumer and privacy protections afforded to them when making any other purchase. That's something all companies have to submit to before doing business in a country. The terms of service cannot change that. That's the point I am making here.
So the correct debate to have would be whether or not enabling this "log" violates actual European consumer/privacy laws. To focus on the Terms of Service is a misnomer and not really relevant to that discussion.
witchdoctor wrote: »witchdoctor wrote: »witchdoctor wrote: »Just want to chime in as it relates to the debate regarding EU law and privacy concerns.
Terms of service are not laws - nor do they have the weight of law. So it really doesn't matter what a player agrees to when they sign up to play a game. If the actions violate the consumer protections of a certain country they are liable and vulnerable to lawsuits regardless of the ToS.
This is especially the case in ESO - which basically says they can do what ever they want in the ToS and that everything is subject to change. Courts have already thrown out Terms of Services in the past that were so open-ended and included provisions like that. Terms of Service are not > the law nor do they give companies free reign to violate the consumer protection or privacy laws in the country they are operating. That being said - I'm unfamiliar with European Law so I have no idea if such a log would actually violate their consumer protection or privacy laws or not (I rather doubt it to be honest). But if it does - then it does - and the ToS wouldn't change that.
I don't think anyone claims (seriously) that TOS supersedes law.
But I do claim that ZOS has far better access to legal advice then what passes as arm-chair lawyering around here.
That's not the impression I got. I've read several comments in this thread that seemed to be suggesting that the terms of service was the only thing that mattered.
Uh ... the only thing I saw that was putting TOS as the 'rule,' was the claim by one person that their physical purchase of the install disk entitled them to anything.
I think its fair to say, it does not.
Their purchase of the game entitles them to the same consumer and privacy protections afforded to them when making any other purchase. That's something all companies have to submit to before doing business in a country. The terms of service cannot change that. That's the point I am making here.
So the correct debate to have would be whether or not enabling this "log" violates actual European consumer/privacy laws. To focus on the Terms of Service is a misnomer and not really relevant to that discussion.
Which may be true. (It is not my area of law).
It was not their claim.
Otherwise, I tend to side with Varanis above on the 'crux' of the matter. Just make anonymous the default.
I better agree with Coop last page: add in an opt-out.
witchdoctor wrote: »witchdoctor wrote: »Just want to chime in as it relates to the debate regarding EU law and privacy concerns.
Terms of service are not laws - nor do they have the weight of law. So it really doesn't matter what a player agrees to when they sign up to play a game. If the actions violate the consumer protections of a certain country they are liable and vulnerable to lawsuits regardless of the ToS.
This is especially the case in ESO - which basically says they can do what ever they want in the ToS and that everything is subject to change. Courts have already thrown out Terms of Services in the past that were so open-ended and included provisions like that. Terms of Service are not > the law nor do they give companies free reign to violate the consumer protection or privacy laws in the country they are operating. That being said - I'm unfamiliar with European Law so I have no idea if such a log would actually violate their consumer protection or privacy laws or not (I rather doubt it to be honest). But if it does - then it does - and the ToS wouldn't change that.
I don't think anyone claims (seriously) that TOS supersedes law.
But I do claim that ZOS has far better access to legal advice then what passes as arm-chair lawyering around here.
That's not the impression I got. I've read several comments in this thread that seemed to be suggesting that the terms of service was the only thing that mattered.
Uh ... the only thing I saw that was putting TOS as the 'rule,' was the claim by one person that their physical purchase of the install disk entitled them to anything.
I think its fair to say, it does not.
Their purchase of the game entitles them to the same consumer and privacy protections afforded to them when making any other purchase. That's something all companies have to submit to before doing business in a country. The terms of service cannot change that. That's the point I am making here.
So the correct debate to have would be whether or not enabling this "log" violates actual European privacy laws. To focus on the Terms of Service is a misnomer and not really relevant to that discussion.
ZirconJunkie wrote: »Guild leaders who want their members to use this tool can force their members to sign up on the third party website and use it.
Individuals who want to use it can sign up and use it.
Those that do not wish to use it and do not sign up to use it shouldn't have their activities recorded and collected by proxy by a third party. "Anonymous" data collection is still data collection. There needs to be an IN GAME option that is OFF BY DEFAULT resulting in zero data collection of any kind unless you specifically turn it on and sign up to use it on the website.
And now, both sides are happy.
Sylvermynx wrote: »*She* thank you. I am neither "he" or "they".
Disparaging inferences? As how? Asking how they're monetizing? EVERY site these days monetizes. I asked and muh answered. I don't like what they're doing, but *shrug*.... if you want to go there well you certainly can and it's no skin off my nose.
The privacy issues are that you cannot (at this time) simply state that you are not willing to participate period. Until that is an option, well.... I will seriously think about no longer playing this game.
witchdoctor wrote: »In my opinion, based on what we know:
It appears to be useful for its intended audience: progression-minded groups. Whilst my guild's Discord has amazingly been silent on the development, I suspect that our 2 progression groups (and certainly the more serious of the 2) will ask all of us to enable logging. And I will, because if I can improve somewhere to get us mo' bettah in vMOL, I will.
If one is not in a steady group, then setting yourself to anonymous would be a wise course of action.
Since the logs are not real-time, if one is anonymous, I suspect the chances of actual trolling are remote.
If that is not the case, and trolling becomes too common, I am willing to bet that ZOS will make further iterations on the logging.
Honestly if they allowed people to opt out 100% then I don't think anybody would care.
Bit of an over reaction don't you think?kendellking_chaosb14_ESO wrote: »I 100% support this for players that want it but being force to join that’s a big fat no from me. Pretty much going to drop all PvE content once this drops. Next year they will be adding a system for crown to “check” your skills, passives and sets.
Ydrisselle wrote: »Tommy_The_Gun wrote: »The only way this could be "ok" and satisfy all players is if they add 3rd option that would basically not record any data if one's decides so, by picking an option in a menu.
So we would have:
1. Default - all is recorded.
2. Anonyms - the game does not record your in game "nick", but records your actions.
3. Disabled - If this option is set, even if some one else in your group records to a log, it will not record any data of yours.
So if 1 player out of 4 has this enable, the log will only record 3 players.
According to @Kihra - ESOLogs dev - your option #3 would make the log completely unusable, so it's not possible to implement that.
I thought this is a game. Creating a tool for it makes me believe people have lost their ability of distinction between game and anything else.
Sad this 21st century in a lot of ways. This is one of them. (Closely related to others.)
From my perspective, I just need complete fight information for the log to work. A partial log (e.g., if I only see 3 out of 12 people) could actually cause more harm than good, since it could lead people to make incorrect assumptions about what is going on. Healer absorbs would also be undercounted (there are other examples I mentioned also, like buff overwriting). Also, the more data you omit, the easier it would become to mess with the log in ways that would not be as visible.
I'm personally fine with any solution that ensures I get complete fight data, i.e. I'd rather get no data than partial data.
EU PC 2000+ CP professional mudballer and pie thrower"Sheggorath, you are the Skooma Cat, for what is crazier than a cat on skooma?" - Fadomai
LiquidPony wrote: »Honestly a lot of the "concerns" being posted here strike me as being somewhat disingenuous and largely misinformed, and the misinformation just keeps spreading and growing as the same people repeatedly throw new straw men on the fire.
LiquidPony wrote: »Did they said WHY exactly it would not work ?
Parrot1986 wrote: »Why not have the same uproar with combat metrics since in 4 man content it clearer shows if someone’s DPS is clearer stronger or poorer? That’s real time as well so surely has a greater risk of miss-use? You also have no option to even opt out to any collecting of that data.
Parrot1986 wrote: »MLGProPlayer wrote: »MLGProPlayer wrote: »More garbage taking up time and resources that could be deployed to FIX the real issues
like the absolutely horrendous servers, support and communication instead of providing elitists with more muck to spread!
I don't agree much with the wording but I do agree that this offers only a slight upgrade to already existing tools and will only be useful to a very small minority of people (not talking about forum people, forum people is already a minority population of people who care enough to be here), while raising legitimate concerns in a majority of other folks.
I completely agree that the way the use of resources is prioritized seems really off, when breaking free, bar swapping and even skills firing (especially ultimates) are now RNG based and need an urgent fix - just to give a few examples that are affecting a very large number of people and impacting heavily their enjoyment of the game.
Also, I don't see how this will improve Accessibility of harder content but i can definitely see how this new tool could lower that same Accessibility.
Addressing the issue of Accessibility seems to go the same direction of "upping the floor/lowering the ceiling": result in the exact opposite of the original intent.
It helps progression guilds progress. It will drastically increase accessibility.
It doesn't affect casuals in any way, shape, or form so you statement of "while raising legitimate concerns in a majority of other folks" is complete nonsense.
As I'm writing this post, the "Invasive" option collects 56% of the votes, so my statement is not non sense, it is fact.
Maybe this will help some progression guilds for Trials, I never said otherwise, but what about Vet DLC dungeons?
People are already afraid to even attempt them, even on normal, and with another tool to further intimidate them, I don't see how this will increase sales on those DLC's....
At ZOS, they are probably brainstorming to find out what kind of "not-resource-heavy-to-produce" content they could use instead of Dungeons, because obviously those are not meeting their sale expectations and if their attempt to increase Accessibility on those fail, you can be sure they will drop the production of such content: is that what you want?
Also, the main point of the argument was to question the choice of prioritizing the use of resources - however small- for the benefit of a very small percentage of the population over using those resources to help improve the gaming experience of a larger number of people.
So your statement is a fact because a few other people share your opinion? That's not what a "fact" is...
This won't have any impact on DLC dungeons. You can already see how much damage the other DPS is doing using Combat Metrics. If you're pulling 80% of team DPS and your healer is pulling 15% DPS, it means your other DPS is a problem and needs to be kicked.
People expecting to be carried through all content crying about being exposed are incredibly selfish. Learn to play the game and then enter the content and no one will give you any negative feedback. Queuing for vet DLC dungeons with mismatched gear and the light attacking your way to 5k DPS is a sure-fire way to get kicked/bad mouthed, and you have no one but yourself to blame. And again, this tool doesn't change that. CM, an existing add-on, gives you a much clearer picture of team performance already.
Your entire answer is complete nonsense and based solely on prejudice.
A lot of people are worried about their privacy because there is no "Opt Out" option enabled by default on a tool that collects their data to a Third Party website.
Can you 100% guarantee that 100% of the people using this tool are going to use it 100% respectfully and with responsibility?
No, you cannot.
Some people go through a great length of time spent and effort to harass/humiliate others.
Just to give you an example, among many, that isn't even related with combat:
https://forums.elderscrollsonline.com/en/discussion/450508/our-eso-houses-are-being-vandalized-can-someone-please-help-us/p1
Since there is NO guarantee that the tool is troll proof, you cannot deny the validity and legitimacy of the concerns expressed in this thread by the majority of the voters so far, and you certainly cannot dismiss them with a very narrow minded "git gud" argument - this is not what the concerns are about.
And even if such an impossible guarantee was given, it is still one's right to decide if they want to share or not their data, without the need to justify themselves.
And yes, in a game where most of the population comes from Single Player games, you can expect a lot of them to be shy about social activities and this tool is NOT going to encourage them to take the leap, quite the opposite actually.
And since you like to tell people to L2P, I'll tell you L2R (Learn to Read): the only thing about my "statement" that is a fact is "while raising legitimate concerns in a majority of other folks", where "majority" is referring of course to the people in this thread, I'm not extrapolating the results to the entire worldwide population lol.
Why not have the same uproar with combat metrics since in 4 man content it clearer shows if someone’s DPS is clearer stronger or poorer? That’s real time as well so surely has a greater risk of miss-use? You also have no option to even opt out to any collecting of that data.