george.smithb16_ESO wrote: »This is a very minor issue to complain about. If you can take the time to report a player, you can take the time to delete an email. There are about a hundred things far more important than this.
Seems to be a case where they are dammed if they do and dammed if they don’t.
Perhaps it’s a way of getting people to only report the worst offenders thus limiting the support emails they will get in turn.
george.smithb16_ESO wrote: »And if they didn't reply with an email, someone would complain that they didn't communicate or didn't know if their reports were getting through.
This is a very minor issue to complain about. If you can take the time to report a player, you can take the time to delete an email. There are about a hundred things far more important than this.
Perhaps it’s a way of getting people to only report the worst offenders thus limiting the support emails they will get in turn.
Actually, that is Unsolicited Spam.george.smithb16_ESO wrote: »Spam is un-solicited email, communication you receive from someone you have no relationship with.
george.smithb16_ESO wrote: »
I get a mailbox full of confirmations from ESO and I appreciate knowing that the reports are getting in and the system is working.
A large rectangle
Actually, that is Unsolicited Spam.george.smithb16_ESO wrote: »Spam is un-solicited email, communication you receive from someone you have no relationship with.
Spam is any activity that causes excessive or unnecessary verbiage, or visual clutter.
In this case, it applies. Getting 35 duplicate emails because I report 35 duplicate gold spammers in a session, constitutes Spam.
IMO they should have all SPAM reports sent to a counter rather than a mailer, and have it generate One mail every 3 or 5 days indicating all X reports arrived.
george.smithb16_ESO wrote: »And then how would they get the screenshot, that affords them the proof, to allow them to actually take action?
You get that in game. What does the email tell you that the in-game message doesn't?