AlexDougherty wrote: »Square-Enix won that lawsuit on a technicality, the bot broke copyright laws, they did not win on the basis that gold-selling is illegal.
Since then the Gold-sellers and bot-makers have moved to countries where Copyright is just a collection of letters. Sending Cease and desist letters would do no good, because they can't prosecute under the laws of those countries.
Please remember US law only applies to the USA, not these countries that I'm carefully avoiding naming.
AlexDougherty wrote: »Square-Enix won that lawsuit on a technicality, the bot broke copyright laws, they did not win on the basis that gold-selling is illegal.
Since then the Gold-sellers and bot-makers have moved to countries where Copyright is just a collection of letters. Sending Cease and desist letters would do no good, because they can't prosecute under the laws of those countries.
Please remember US law only applies to the USA, not these countries that I'm carefully avoiding naming.
AlienDiplomat wrote: »AlexDougherty wrote: »Square-Enix won that lawsuit on a technicality, the bot broke copyright laws, they did not win on the basis that gold-selling is illegal.
Since then the Gold-sellers and bot-makers have moved to countries where Copyright is just a collection of letters. Sending Cease and desist letters would do no good, because they can't prosecute under the laws of those countries.
Please remember US law only applies to the USA, not these countries that I'm carefully avoiding naming.
Simple fix: Deny accounts based in these countries from purchasing or accessing the game. Don't want to play by the rules of civil society? Then fluff off back to the dark age!
Also not naming any names (but my tongue is definitely bleeding.)
AlienDiplomat wrote: »AlexDougherty wrote: »Square-Enix won that lawsuit on a technicality, the bot broke copyright laws, they did not win on the basis that gold-selling is illegal.
Since then the Gold-sellers and bot-makers have moved to countries where Copyright is just a collection of letters. Sending Cease and desist letters would do no good, because they can't prosecute under the laws of those countries.
Please remember US law only applies to the USA, not these countries that I'm carefully avoiding naming.
Simple fix: Deny accounts based in these countries from purchasing or accessing the game. Don't want to play by the rules of civil society? Then fluff off back to the dark age!
Also not naming any names (but my tongue is definitely bleeding.)
JunkyardWolf wrote: »Goldah is based in China, good luck going after them. but here ya go
G4P LIMITED
LuGuZuoBiao F building,
No. 199 LuLong Road,YueLu District
ChangSha,HuNan
Changsha Xunyou Network Technology Co., Ltd.
Furong District,Changsha City, Hunan Province, China . No. 400,Room 508 Renmin Road, guo ji IT cheng
AlienDiplomat wrote: »
AlienDiplomat wrote: »
So if I play in the same house as someone else who plays, I get banned?
AlienDiplomat wrote: »AlienDiplomat wrote: »
So if I play in the same house as someone else who plays, I get banned?
Only if you set up a third party proxy or VPN to play the game through because you are deliberately trying to mask your IP address to avoid getting caught by exploit filters, AND YOU WOULD KNOW IF YOU DID.
Big companies need to step up. If backward countries want to go soft on piracy and copyright violations like this, then countries in civilized nations need to deny those countries access to their product. Period.
Perhaps the outcry of legitimate players in those types of countries missing out on great titles will cause the people to topple these draconian regimes?
wrlifeboil wrote: »JunkyardWolf wrote: »Goldah is based in China, good luck going after them. but here ya go
G4P LIMITED
LuGuZuoBiao F building,
No. 199 LuLong Road,YueLu District
ChangSha,HuNan
Changsha Xunyou Network Technology Co., Ltd.
Furong District,Changsha City, Hunan Province, China . No. 400,Room 508 Renmin Road, guo ji IT cheng
Gold selling in video games is illegal in China but like @JunkyardWolf wrote, good luck with enforcement.
YourNameHere wrote: »Gold selling and farming is legal in China. Their government backs it. Look it up.
AlienDiplomat wrote: »
You can't, which along with dynamic IP addresses, is why Zos or any other MMO won't bother with IP bans.AlienDiplomat wrote: »
Simple question: How do you differentiate a "proxy" from a non-proxy IP where two brothers are playing from their home?
I've never heard of a case brought by SE, but Blizzard's win against WOWGlider certainly was on copyright and not that writing bots is 'illegal' in any way.AlexDougherty wrote: »Square-Enix won that lawsuit on a technicality, the bot broke copyright laws, they did not win on the basis that gold-selling is illegal.
Simple answer: you can't.AlienDiplomat wrote: »
Simple question: How do you differentiate a "proxy" from a non-proxy IP where two brothers are playing from their home?
Not true, a large number of the botters are freelance and sell their gold to the RMT outfits, who are of course large commercial organisations in a multi-billion dollar industry.Most botters are actual companies
Why is this stuff not illegal? Why don't games companies simply write a clause into the TOS that prevents people from commercially benefiting from the game or something? If the company is in such a country that magically exempts them them they shouldn't be allowed to play.AlexDougherty wrote: »Square-Enix won that lawsuit on a technicality, the bot broke copyright laws, they did not win on the basis that gold-selling is illegal.
Since then the Gold-sellers and bot-makers have moved to countries where Copyright is just a collection of letters. Sending Cease and desist letters would do no good, because they can't prosecute under the laws of those countries.
Please remember US law only applies to the USA, not these countries that I'm carefully avoiding naming.
It's not illegal because judges don't want to shut down mods completely, like the lightsaber mod in skyrim (loved that), and their is no legal difference between a mod and a bot.Why is this stuff not illegal? Why don't games companies simply write a clause into the TOS that prevents people from commercially benefiting from the game or something? If the company is in such a country that magically exempts them them they shouldn't be allowed to play.