I actually love this post.
By operating an office in the Australian territory, it doesn't matter what Terms of Service ZOS outlines - if they can't actually provide the service then they need to cease offering the product as marketable.
Our laws and operating an office here override the caveats of the product provider, on a reasonable basis. Which I'm more than confident that there are enough case examples floating around to demonstrate service is not reasonable.
A seperate but relevant point is that Akamai is not disclosed as impacting product service dleivery; it directly impacts performance through routing through Europe, to America - artificially inflating response time in game and was ONLY added after games launch, without a change in description to sold product.
And the best part? ... This thread cannot be locked down; as another part of operating an office in Australia means you need to provide a platform for clients to clearly and visibly contact product provider, where it is known they will respond.
I've taken the liberty also of recording original post and subsequent responses should any forum moderators be unaware of requirements for Australian consumer law.
I actually love this post.
By operating an office in the Australian territory, it doesn't matter what Terms of Service ZOS outlines - if they can't actually provide the service then they need to cease offering the product as marketable.
Our laws and operating an office here override the caveats of the product provider, on a reasonable basis. Which I'm more than confident that there are enough case examples floating around to demonstrate service is not reasonable.
A seperate but relevant point is that Akamai is not disclosed as impacting product service dleivery; it directly impacts performance through routing through Europe, to America - artificially inflating response time in game and was ONLY added after games launch, without a change in description to sold product.
And the best part? ... This thread cannot be locked down; as another part of operating an office in Australia means you need to provide a platform for clients to clearly and visibly contact product provider, where it is known they will respond.
I've taken the liberty also of recording original post and subsequent responses should any forum moderators be unaware of requirements for Australian consumer law.
Um Zos servers are not located in Australia and I don't think they have offices in aus? As a customer you are agreeing to their terms to gain access to their servers and play their content operated in a different country. Does aus even have any legal jurisdiction on a U.S. Based company operating servers in U.S. And EU?
starkerealm wrote: »I actually love this post.
By operating an office in the Australian territory, it doesn't matter what Terms of Service ZOS outlines - if they can't actually provide the service then they need to cease offering the product as marketable.
Our laws and operating an office here override the caveats of the product provider, on a reasonable basis. Which I'm more than confident that there are enough case examples floating around to demonstrate service is not reasonable.
A seperate but relevant point is that Akamai is not disclosed as impacting product service dleivery; it directly impacts performance through routing through Europe, to America - artificially inflating response time in game and was ONLY added after games launch, without a change in description to sold product.
And the best part? ... This thread cannot be locked down; as another part of operating an office in Australia means you need to provide a platform for clients to clearly and visibly contact product provider, where it is known they will respond.
I've taken the liberty also of recording original post and subsequent responses should any forum moderators be unaware of requirements for Australian consumer law.
Um Zos servers are not located in Australia and I don't think they have offices in aus? As a customer you are agreeing to their terms to gain access to their servers and play their content operated in a different country. Does aus even have any legal jurisdiction on a U.S. Based company operating servers in U.S. And EU?
It's complicated.
They have subject matter jurisdiction. The consumer is one of their citizens, and the game is sold in Australia. But, they may not have personal jurisdiction.
Personal jurisdiction is a concept in international law, where you're determining if the court has any means to enforce their rulings on a party that resides (or operates) in another country. So, it's distinctly possible that the ACCC and the Australian courts could find against ZOS, or Zenimax as a whole, but be unable to actually enforce anything because they have no actual authority that ZOS respects.
Jurisdiction in international law is fun/complicated/a complete cluster****. Pick two.
the OP's entire argument is flawed
he (i assume he) says "the product is not fit for purpose". whereas actually it is, its just slow.
being fit for purpose (not working) and slow (still working) are 2 different things.
he states he cant use it because of a "queue" - so what, its still working and actually the company has publically stated what its going to do to fix it. in short, have patience!
I sympathise with you AUS guys - and i do know from experience akamai is terrible (we stopped using them in the UK for an ecommerce company about 10 years ago for this very reason) - but there are workarounds - such as VPNS - which i appreciate is not ideal, but it is a workaround.
It isnt going to change, so as consumers you either need to vote with your feet and move to another MMO , or live with it.
this thread needs to be closed tbh. its gone on 3 pages longer than it should have @ZOS_GinaBruno
Androconium wrote: »My rights
This is now a formally lodged complaint with the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission.
The reference number is in the title.
Androconium wrote: »My rights
This is now a formally lodged complaint with the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission.
The reference number is in the title.
Sadly the law in aus does not pertain to an online service such as a mmo. The game runs, its playable and under active development thus your queue complaint is not going to hold. Especially since they spoke about this. Imo ppl just need to chill the hell out.
Shady_Knights wrote: »DisgracefulMind wrote: »fix an issue they didn't even expect to have in the first place?
They already admitted they have known *for months* their servers could not handle the population.
Actually I think the issues have been there for *years*.
So there would have been plenty of time to adjust capacity, but they decided to live with it (and take the moey).
The actual statement from the Studio President says that the increase in population covered a period of weeks, and that the increase eventually exceeded all measures ZoS was able to make with existing hardware.
My impression of the statement is that a recent trend of population spikes initially appeared to be temporary, were initially attributed to game Events (Midyear Mayhem in January) and free play marketing, and could not be clearly identified as a permanent trend until there was precious little time to react.
Not sure what you are reading. But the announcement is posted here:
https://forums.elderscrollsonline.com/en/discussion/467936/pc-eu-server-update-april-11/p1
"Starting in January we've had an influx of new players - we've have had some of our highest weekly average user, daily active user, and peak concurrent user numbers in the last six weeks since we launched on console back in 2015. So, it was in January when EU players started noticing degraded server performance. We made tweaks and updates to the service to free up extra database resources and other boosts to performance, which is why you have been seeing more and longer maintenance outages than normal in the last couple of months."
he goes on:
"However, in late March, we really saw a huge spike in the number of users logging in, which led to too many concurrent users for the platform to effectively support. As a result, players on PC EU have seen a severe degradation in service. This degradation started in January, but has greatly accelerated in the last week - lag spikes, disconnects, inability to zone from instance to instance, weird interactions with LFG, etc. These problems are greatly exacerbated by having serious load on the servers, as there are too many users for the hardware to handle."
So no, it's not a period of weeks, it's a period of Months (that they acknowledge). They tried to contain it, but were unsuccessful and they acknowledge that there's been a severe degradation in service. This degradation started in January.
They've finally have come clean now on the 11th April. Despite knowing these issues, they continually promoted festivals and free player weekends compounding the issue.
Don't forget that they've also said other fixes will announced late last year to fix client performance will be coming in sometime midway this year.
Good if you aren't impacted by all of this, but a lot of people are.
the OP's entire argument is flawed
he (i assume he) says "the product is not fit for purpose". whereas actually it is, its just slow.
being fit for purpose (not working) and slow (still working) are 2 different things.
he states he cant use it because of a "queue" - so what, its still working and actually the company has publically stated what its going to do to fix it. in short, have patience!
I sympathise with you AUS guys - and i do know from experience akamai is terrible (we stopped using them in the UK for an ecommerce company about 10 years ago for this very reason) - but there are workarounds - such as VPNS - which i appreciate is not ideal, but it is a workaround.
It isnt going to change, so as consumers you either need to vote with your feet and move to another MMO , or live with it.
this thread needs to be closed tbh. its gone on 3 pages longer than it should have @ZOS_GinaBruno
"I'm just a country lawyer"* so let me get this straight, if I'm an Australian and I buy a Koenigsegg sports car that was advertised to do 300km/h (you do the math lol) and it turns out it only does 50km/h and the determined reason shows it's a fault engine, and Koenigsegg refuses to change the engine free of cost to make the car go the advertised 300km/h (they offer a repair that will make the car go max 100km/h), that isn't a case for the Australian ACCC? Because the car runs "(fit for purpose)" still taking you from point A to point B albeit slow in max 50 or 100km/h "(still working)"? Maybe the argument is that it's illegal to drive faster than 120km/h on the roads anyway, so the 100km/h top speed should be sufficient?
Or maybe the car randomly stops, forcing you to wait 20mins before it works again? Well it runs sometimes "(fit for purpose)", still taking you from point A to point B, even if it takes longer to get to point B, and Koenigsegg offers a repair that makes the "cool down" only 10 mins "(still working)"?
Ok. Got it.
*(If you know the expression)
Edit* Changed Ferrari to Koenigsegg - go Sweden!and minor polishing
the OP's entire argument is flawed
he (i assume he) says "the product is not fit for purpose". whereas actually it is, its just slow.
being fit for purpose (not working) and slow (still working) are 2 different things.
he states he cant use it because of a "queue" - so what, its still working and actually the company has publically stated what its going to do to fix it. in short, have patience!
I sympathise with you AUS guys - and i do know from experience akamai is terrible (we stopped using them in the UK for an ecommerce company about 10 years ago for this very reason) - but there are workarounds - such as VPNS - which i appreciate is not ideal, but it is a workaround.
It isnt going to change, so as consumers you either need to vote with your feet and move to another MMO , or live with it.
this thread needs to be closed tbh. its gone on 3 pages longer than it should have @ZOS_GinaBruno
"I'm just a country lawyer"* so let me get this straight, if I'm an Australian and I buy a Koenigsegg sports car that was advertised to do 300km/h (you do the math lol) and it turns out it only does 50km/h and the determined reason shows it's a fault engine, and Koenigsegg refuses to change the engine free of cost to make the car go the advertised 300km/h (they offer a repair that will make the car go max 100km/h), that isn't a case for the Australian ACCC? Because the car runs "(fit for purpose)" still taking you from point A to point B albeit slow in max 50 or 100km/h "(still working)"? Maybe the argument is that it's illegal to drive faster than 120km/h on the roads anyway, so the 100km/h top speed should be sufficient?
Or maybe the car randomly stops, forcing you to wait 20mins before it works again? Well it runs sometimes "(fit for purpose)", still taking you from point A to point B, even if it takes longer to get to point B, and Koenigsegg offers a repair that makes the "cool down" only 10 mins "(still working)"?
Ok. Got it.
*(If you know the expression)
Edit* Changed Ferrari to Koenigsegg - go Sweden!and minor polishing
Androconium wrote: »Zenimax Australia promotes the massively-multiplayer online (MMO) video game entertainment package entitled "Elder Scrolls Online"
In the past week they have introduced a login queueing system to limit the number of concurrent players that can access their "PC-EU" megaserver.
My purchased products include:
An initial one-off cost for basic game play software "the game".
A six-month subscription for access to downloadable content (DLC) and other game play elements as defined in the ESO Plus subscription.
The product is no longer fit-for-pupose.
I am not seeking compensation; I am seeking an immediate remedy to the login queueing restriction, that by Zenimax' own comments, is to limit the number of concurrent players, which is in direct contrast to the concept of "MMO". Players located around the world should be able to login at any time and compete successfully with each other.
This is now not possible.
The current increase in player volume is the result of promotional activity in 2019, that has seen new customers overloading an unprepared system, a system that has had ongoing stability problems for the past 24 months.
Put bluntly, they have expended effort on attracting new business, without first ensuring that existing business could be provided with a fit-for-purpose and stable product.
(If I have represented something incorrectly, please identify the issue and I will amend the complaint)
kyle.wilson wrote: »Androconium wrote: »My rights
This is now a formally lodged complaint with the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission.
The reference number is in the title.
The TOS that was agreed to has many restrictions. This isn't really the correct way to get what you want. Most likely it'll get a significant reduction in playing time (i.e. 0) Threatening legal actions doesn't work when you've agreed to arbitration already.
You've obviously never ran a business if you think that you cant get blindsided by a significant increase/decrease of orders of whatever good/service you sell.
I recommend thoroughly rereading the TOS before continuing.
Androconium wrote: »My rights
This is now a formally lodged complaint with the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission.
The reference number is in the title.
Sadly the law in aus does not pertain to an online service such as a mmo. The game runs, its playable and under active development thus your queue complaint is not going to hold. Especially since they spoke about this. Imo ppl just need to chill the hell out.
Rubbish. Both arguments. International law and it being an supplier issue aren’t defenses. If your name is on the product and you’re the one making money from the sale it’s your responsibility.
TheRealPotoroo wrote: »Androconium wrote: »My rights
This is now a formally lodged complaint with the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission.
The reference number is in the title.
Sadly the law in aus does not pertain to an online service such as a mmo. The game runs, its playable and under active development thus your queue complaint is not going to hold. Especially since they spoke about this. Imo ppl just need to chill the hell out.
Yeah, actually it does. Go ask Steam.
the OP's entire argument is flawed
he (i assume he) says "the product is not fit for purpose". whereas actually it is, its just slow.
being fit for purpose (not working) and slow (still working) are 2 different things.
he states he cant use it because of a "queue" - so what, its still working and actually the company has publically stated what its going to do to fix it. in short, have patience!
I sympathise with you AUS guys - and i do know from experience akamai is terrible (we stopped using them in the UK for an ecommerce company about 10 years ago for this very reason) - but there are workarounds - such as VPNS - which i appreciate is not ideal, but it is a workaround.
It isnt going to change, so as consumers you either need to vote with your feet and move to another MMO , or live with it.
this thread needs to be closed tbh. its gone on 3 pages longer than it should have @ZOS_GinaBruno
"I'm just a country lawyer"* so let me get this straight, if I'm an Australian and I buy a Koenigsegg sports car that was advertised to do 300km/h (you do the math lol) and it turns out it only does 50km/h and the determined reason shows it's a fault engine, and Koenigsegg refuses to change the engine free of cost to make the car go the advertised 300km/h (they offer a repair that will make the car go max 100km/h), that isn't a case for the Australian ACCC? Because the car runs "(fit for purpose)" still taking you from point A to point B albeit slow in max 50 or 100km/h "(still working)"? Maybe the argument is that it's illegal to drive faster than 120km/h on the roads anyway, so the 100km/h top speed should be sufficient?
Or maybe the car randomly stops, forcing you to wait 20mins before it works again? Well it runs sometimes "(fit for purpose)", still taking you from point A to point B, even if it takes longer to get to point B, and Koenigsegg offers a repair that makes the "cool down" only 10 mins "(still working)"?
Ok. Got it.
*(If you know the expression)
Edit* Changed Ferrari to Koenigsegg - go Sweden!and minor polishing
your example (whilst good) - is not relevant to this case.
in the example above, you state that the koenigsegg/ferrari is advertised to do 300kmph and thats the reason you bought it - and its faulty because it only does 50. - yup, i see that, because it was specifically bought for that purpose and doesnt live up to it.
however, in ESO's case - ZOS does NOT advertise its uptime/availablity or service - in fact it specifically says it doesnt guarentee it! - and you (all of us) have already agreed to it by agreeing implicitly to the t+c's
in essence, you (me, everyone) are paying for something which cannot be guarenteed - and indeed affected by force majure.
so in conclusion, naff all you can do!
(go koenigsegg!)
Well this is actually what Zos has advertised in regards to what their online service is.
Not exactly what you find in the game is it?