Had a cool discussion last night before the piece went up about how there's likely an economic calculus where the lawsuits are cheaper than buying server-side computing cycles that would eliminate a lot of the cheating methods
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Was fun to think about the cost/benefit analysis when it comes to free-to-play
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About to read this (seems likely that the answer will be in the article), but is lurking on discord to finding unsuspecting cheaters legal then? That seems very sketchy
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not really an issue
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Is it not? I mean I'm not sure I'd be comfortable with folks from MS snooping in Discord servers listening out for anyone who mentions they have a pirated copy of Windows installed, waiting to swoop in and take action.
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what law would that break, though? is it even a violation of discord's ToS?
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In the EU it might be in violation of Article 8 of the ECHR (Right to private life) and I'm fairly sure they wouldn't permit its use in court. Don't know about the US though, and knowing Discord it's likely not even a violaton of their ToS.
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it's a public discord channel dawg
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I just figuratively slapped myself in the face.
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Another fascinating aspect of this is that the issue is a-hole control, possibly as much as cheat control. You can patch to eliminate an exploit, but there's no fix for people determined to act like a-holes and ruin the experience for everyone else. And therein lies the rub.
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Great article!
Merci. Twitter en tiendra compte pour améliorer votre fil. SupprimerSupprimer
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Le chargement semble prendre du temps.
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