seraphi
Seraphi
seraphi

That’s funny, I was wondering how long it would take for the Bernie Blamers to show up.

You realize that 20% of superdelegates being black is lower than the 22% of registered democrats who are black right?  And that underrepresentation will actually increase because the percentage of black democrats in congress and governorships is lower than 20%? So how does reducing the power of a group over

Brace yourself for the Bernie Backers assholes.

My original post was mostly trolling and you can tell from the replies I got I hit a nerve. But, as we agree, Blizzard is the one entirely at fault here. What is the saddest part of all of this is that Blizzard could have easily added code to their game clients that scans the system for the existence of Bossland’s

Especially since it does not modify nor use a single line of Blizzard’s code, can’t even hit them with a DMCA.

Lol I just don’t play online games and think people that take them seriously are fucking pathetic. It is just a video game. Besides, EULA and TOS only apply to account holder and not Bossland, a third party. After all, Blizzard is the one stealing code and being forced to pay back court fees. Nobody cares how upset

The german higher courts sure think so since Blizzard is the one looking like a bitch stealing code and owing lawyer fees.

Hahahaha sorry little boy, but I don’t waste my fucking time with Blizzard’s online bullshit. Try again loser.

You should be a lawyer, “Blizzard can eat my ass” is some infallible legal logic. You, my friend, have cracked the case.

Good thing your raging doesn’t address a single point Aronjlove made. Here, let me simplify. Game company made a game. Cheat company made a cheat for the game which it sells to a player. The player violates the TOA and EULA for the game by using the cheat. The cheat however isn’t bound by the EULA or the TOA, thus the

Speaking as an IP attorney in the US, your analysis is very on point. Glad to see that someone here can differentiate between a contract violation and other actionable events.

But seriously. If there’s legal ground, that’s one thing. But otherwise, lobby for said laws/regulations to help aid you against such things, or deal with it.

I’ve mentioned to others that if Blizzard can actually quantify that users left the game specifically due to Bossland’s bots then they could potentially have a case. Since they do nothing with Blizzard’s code there is no DMCA claim here, just a bunch of upset players. Blizzard could easily make their client check for

“With games like HotS, Diablo, and WoW; it will directly affect possible income and retention within that service in regards to legit players wanting to play.”

And you’re a dumbass if you take my first comment seriously. However, Blizzard are the biggest dumbasses of all; they had their only court win against Bossland overturned and stole code.

Bossland does not play the game so the EULA or TOS do not apply to them. The program does not modify Blizzard’s code so I do not believe it is a DMCA violation and therefore not illegal. And as I mentioned to another person I used to smoke and sell crack so using drug dealers as a comparison does not sway me like you

Not really. If it was changing the code and truly cheating like GameShark did, then I could see a complaint. Since this is just simple automation it isn’t doing anything a human player wouldn’t do.

Isn’t this just a bot for mining gold or farming XP? It’s just automation and if it bothers you, team vote to kick the dude.

Actually no, it isn’t hard to find sympathy. They found a market that needed supply and provided it. This is nothing but a software version of GameShark and if your company’s financial model exists on non-existent bullshit that your sell for money, too fucking bad. Blizzard can eat my ass along with all you assholes