Long-term effects? Like what? It's something that they, and every other company, has had a LEGAL RIGHT TO DO FOR YEARS. They are only enforcing this. Nothing has been changed.chewbacca1010 said:Who is talking about the law? No one is saying they cannot legally do it. I didn't even say that it wasn't their right to do so. What I am saying (at least now) is that they should have thought a bit harder about enacting this.Fidelias said:Except for the fact that legally YOU'RE NOT SUPPOSED TO MODIFY GAMES PERIOD. This has been part of the license agreement or whatever for years,(You know, that thing you click on before you can play/install the game that tells you all the stuff you can be sued over) the only difference now is that someone is actually enforcing it.chewbacca1010 said:That this is happening is troubling, as experimentation with games and game code is what the industry is founded on. This may be light experimentation, but it should be allowed nonetheless.
Certainly in the multiplayer, this ban would be reasonable, but single player? No. People should be allowed to muck about as they see fit, as this is what the industry was founded upon. I don't think those telling people to "suck it up" realize what kind of dangerous precedent these actions set. It is like film companies suing smaller filmmakers despite fair use, knowing full well that they don't have the coin to fight it, even though they may legally be in the right.
And that they can even detect this stuff is also troubling. What a brave new world of gaming we live in.
Legal or not, this industry and the software industry in general was built on experimentation. If they wish to limit this, great for them, but bad for the industry as a whole, which generally values tinkering. Naturally, this tinkering is usually tolerated regardless of what may in the EULA (which, I imagine, is usually there just in case something extreme happens, so they have a way of stepping in if need be). This news is not good, if you ask me.
EDIT (I always do this):
Exactly. People seem to be blinded by their hatred of online cheaters to bother thinking about this from a rational standpoint or even what the long term effects might be.Enkidu88 said:The really troubling thing here is, if they're banning people for using trainers in singleplayer, what hope is there for the modding community? What if someone wants to mod in new units or abilities? Are they going to ban them too for modifying the game code?
The argument that they're trying to maintain gamerscore and achievement integrity is pure bullshit. Why don't they have an option like in X-3: Terran Conflict on Steam. If you modify the game, either through cheats or mods, it locks you out of getting points or achievements. Problem solved, everyone's happy. Wouldn't that have been an easier, and more equitable, solution? Obviously they can detect if the game's been modified, how hard would it be to simply tell the game to stop collecting points/giving out achievements?
Trust me, I hate this game. I HATE Blizzard(Though not as much as Activision), there is nothing I want more than an excuse to hate Blizzard even more. But this is not the reason.