burnerburnsbright
BurnerBurnsBright
burnerburnsbright

My limited understanding is that when a judge is asked to temporarely suspend something, as opposed to declaring it valid/invalid after a proper hearing, the legal threshold is much lower, something in the realm of “on the face of what is presented” or “does it have a chance to be struck later”.

There’s a big difference between calling the cops on someone and protecting their fragility. Tell the asshole off. Or just ignore him and cut all contact, but nothing in this story justifies calling the cops. Do you know what cops do to people? What if the guy is black?

Eh, it doesn’t sound like she’s done much to dissuade him yet. It wouldn’t hurt to give him the benefit of the doubt. I was pretty damn clingy and desperate in my teens, but I could keep my tantrums and despair to myself after getting shot down. Just because your emotionally immature, doesn’t mean you are incapable

It might be begging the question but it doesn’t quite hit that point in my opinion (until the end at least) I think the greater point is that we should support what we believe in, some ‘pirates’ still do this.

What, then, would you suggest as a salient argument against piracy?

I’ve always deplored the hand-wringing, “it’s not really theft, because nothing is physically removed from a point of sale” assertion—particularly as digital delivery of goods has become more common. I was in my senior year of high school when Napster

I don’t think piracy out-and-out prevents the production of new games, and definitely should’ve worded my parenthetical statement better.

The real endpoint of piracy--at this time, anyhow—has been ever more efforts at creating truly draconian DRM that punishes legitimate consumers almost as much as the pirates

Lolz on the constitution being amended. White americans view that fucked up antiquated document as being written by god. Most have never read it, imo, and yet they will cite it incorrectly when arguing about their rights. Also, that document doesn’t mean shit to anyone outside of gov and white suburbs.

Be careful what you wish for. A Constitutional Convention in the very near future given the current set of circumstances might be the final nail in America’s coffin.

On top of everyone else’s replies involving the EULA, there’s some pretty specific verbiage in the law and contracts involving profiting from such things. If Bob the hacker in his mom’s basement writes some code that allows him to bot the crap out of WoW so he can have the latest and greatest armor out there, but

It’s an issue covered by the reverse engineering language in the Digital Millennium Copyright Act and related international law. I’d argue that some of the legal repercussions of parts of the DMCA remain troubling, the sections regarding reverse engineering are applicable to copyright infringement or fraud, either of

Under US Law, I don’t know about German or w.e. there is no requirement to prove damages for copyright infringement. There are statutory damages.

Based on my experience with Kinja, it’s the star button.

I’ll bite.

The copywrite infringement is probably the easiest part of this to “prove” in court. Because they’re gaining monetarily from a product that uses portions of Blizzard’s code to work. Riot has already won a similar lawsuit against their own hackers.

While I see your point, you have to agree that not doing anything about cheaters will eventually cause the game to become infamous. That alone would give grounds for a lawsuit.

Ya, but the part you’re glossing over is the important part. You’re making it all about marks and logos, which is only one part of the conversation. The company is providing clear instruction for how to use their piece of software to impact a specific game.

Your assumption that it is hard to quantify the affect of cheaters driving existing players out of an in game economy is baseless. This information is incredibly easy to track and every video game running a live service successfully does so.

I refuse to buy or play Overwatch based on the reports of cheating happening so frequently. Blizzard lost money as a direct result of companies like Bossland existing. Bossland cost Blizzard this consumer’s money.

This right here. That was largely what killed the Division. Ubisoft’s relaxed attitude toward cheaters (when it was still popular) has reduced the player base to a fraction of what it once was.

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