In his summary ruling on Blizzard's case against World of Warcraft cheat-maker Michael Donnelly (released yesterday), District Court Judge David Campbell has stated that the act of using a bot in violation of a game's license or terms of use qualifies as a copyright violation. Huh?
Just to get it out of the way, I'm as much against cheats as the next guy. As a WoW player in particular, I'm glad to see Blizzard shut down the cheaters and cheat-makers. But this ruling doesn't make much sense to me; it seems like a case of the judge just trying to find a way to cover something which doesn't really cross any real existing laws. Worse, it sets some (arguably) nasty precedent, effectively making EULAs law (any violation is a violation of copyright), rather than simple contracts where the most you can lose is your right to use the software.
Strangely, the judge actually dismissed Blizzard's claims that the cheats violated the DMCA. Given the amount of use the DMCA gets in such cases, you'd think that the ruling would have been the other way around, at least. In any case, it seems the case is now going to trial to decide the DMCA portion for certain.
What do you guys think? Should this ruling stand? Personally, I think that it shouldn't--stripping cheaters of their access to the game and perhaps making a civil claim against the cheat-makers for damaging the game for everyone else is justified, but making any EULA violations illegal, as Judge Campbell (inadvertently or otherwise) has done is going too far.
Well in my over the top example that you apparently took seriously, Blizzard as a company provided a game that by its design automatically creates an uneven playing feild for someone that started out years after the game was released. Now I don't really think they should be sued, however I think Blizzard sueing some one instead of banning them and anyone else using the bot is like taking a sledge hammer to a fly on your foot. Totally uncalled for I am not ok with the precedent this sets.
Uh yeah and I take it you have actually surveyed the multimillion WOW users to see if they have actually even heard of this bot! My bet is the vast majority would have no clue what you are talking about if you asked them, and I would even go so far as to say few of the millions would truely care.
And yep I am sure WOW would cease to exist with out this over reaction. Not that every other MMO ever created hasn't had to deal with and has maned up and dealt with it accordingly without some over the top lawsuit.
Yeah the last thing you want to say in any of these threads is that copyright is broken and that copyright holders shouldn't have the rights to stomp all over their perspective and current customers. Thank goodness copyright for the most part covers things I can live without.
YOu just said the keywords, potentially destroying their business, I highly doubt that would ever happen and on top of that I have a hard time with preemptive lawsuits, just because you think it may hurt your business is not enough you have to prove that it hurts your business, and last I checked WOW has continued to add to its astronimical amount of subscribers while still increasing its cashflow from WOW by the truckload.
I think if he wants to automate his game to play for him he should be able to. As far as I can tell he is not breaking the game machanics so everything he is doing works within the game worlds rules. He is still killing things as the game requires he is just doing it more efficiently, if that is not the case then it may be a different story.
I never said it should destroy their business what I did say is that I don't see Blizzard getting on less truckload of money because of this.
why would u think the law is justice or logical... its an industry the USA leads in (for now)
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