NuclearKangaroo said:
erbkaiser said:
And again, what was his alternative? Wait until the inevitable malicious exploit gets on Steam?
By all accounts, Valve was informed months ago, and decided to ignore it.
couldnt he contact more devs to try to make his voice be heard? couldnt he start a campaign to let people know theres a potential exploit, he could even put an ingame message in his game or something
there ARE ways
All of my this. You know what adria richards did that pissed everyone off a few years ago? Tweeted a picture of people to blow perceived misbehavior out of proportion by stirring up her media backing into a frenzy? This guy could have easily done the same. Drop lines to kotaku, drop lines to RPS, spread the word that hey, I found a potential dangerous exploit in steam and valve isn't doing shit to fix it. People got on adria richards' case (rightfully so, imo, but that's a totally different discussion) for making a private issue public and attempting to shame people instead of going through the proper channels, but that's
precisely what this developer could have done in this case. It's the logical "next step" if you're somehow so bothered by Valve's inaction that you want to stir up drama over it.
Actually putting forth code to "prove a point" is the step after that - where you've decided fuck it, I no longer care about the consequences, Valve needs to fix their shit and I'm going to prove why. You know you're breaking the rules, you know you're violating Valve's trust, but your anger over the issue is too great to care anymore. It's completely logical that he got banned for a year, especially because he skipped step 2 and went right for the jugular. He knew it would happen (and if he didn't, he was retarded).
That said, if he *really* wanted to be a ****, he could have simply kept records of his complaints with Steam and then waited for an actual attack to come. Once some shady company actually does inject some malicious shit and trojan all over people's computers, he could whip out his records and say "well would you look at that, it's almost like I brought this up before!" He could even potentially take Valve to court over it, citing damages via consumers of their games being infected by it. And if he waited and the exploit got fixed before any harmful injection, then he can sleep better at night knowing he brought it up and they fixed it. Everybody wins.
The developer did some really retarded shit here, can't even deny it. Valve's reaction is no less than expected.