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  3. Should Hackers Get Jail Time?

Should Hackers Get Jail Time?

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  • G GuyThiebaut

    How about not using the hack yourself and just playing the game as it was meant to be played?

    “That which can be asserted without evidence, can be dismissed without evidence.”

    ― Christopher Hitchens

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    BrainiacV
    wrote on last edited by
    #74

    Love your tag from Hitchens, just had to mention that the nutcase radio I listen to for entertainment's sake and to see how these bozos attempt to internalize and justify their bizarre worldview (AFR - American Family Radio)[^] One of their commentators, Crane Durham, in his "Nothing But Truth" (which I view as anything but), asserted that "Even Christopher Hitchens will admit there is a God now." I thought that was priceless. Since he is dead now, we can make any statement we want because he is not around to argue it.

    Psychosis at 10 Film at 11 Those who do not remember the past, are doomed to repeat it. Those who do not remember the past, cannot build upon it.

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    • L Lost User

      Scenerio: 1: You and your friends invest big $$$ to develop a game. 2: You and your friends work endless hours on the game. 3: You and your friends invest additional $$$ to market the game. 4: You and your friends get 100,000 happy customers. Then some chuckle-head puts together a hack in his spare time and is now making money off a cheat that allows a small percentage of your customers to make thousands of your honest customers angry. Questions: How much income would such a cheat have to cost you before you saw it has a problem? How much developer time would you have to waste addressing these hacks (instead of adding new content) before you saw this has a problem? Serious questions - because I don't understand the mindset that holds that freedom includes the right to destroy other people's work.

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      BrainiacV
      wrote on last edited by
      #75

      Sic the DCMA on them invoking the clause about reverse engineering business secrets.

      Psychosis at 10 Film at 11 Those who do not remember the past, are doomed to repeat it. Those who do not remember the past, cannot build upon it.

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      • B BrainiacV

        Love your tag from Hitchens, just had to mention that the nutcase radio I listen to for entertainment's sake and to see how these bozos attempt to internalize and justify their bizarre worldview (AFR - American Family Radio)[^] One of their commentators, Crane Durham, in his "Nothing But Truth" (which I view as anything but), asserted that "Even Christopher Hitchens will admit there is a God now." I thought that was priceless. Since he is dead now, we can make any statement we want because he is not around to argue it.

        Psychosis at 10 Film at 11 Those who do not remember the past, are doomed to repeat it. Those who do not remember the past, cannot build upon it.

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        GuyThiebaut
        wrote on last edited by
        #76

        Thanks :) Towards the end of his life Hitchens admitted that when he was near the end, out of frailness, he might say something that led others to believe that he believed in God. He then went on to say that people were not to use this as an excuse to claim that he was now 'saved'. I certainly did not agree with all that he said, however I found him to be brave, intelligent and did agree with a lot of what he said. People like Daniel Dennett are still around to carry the flame :)

        “That which can be asserted without evidence, can be dismissed without evidence.”

        ― Christopher Hitchens

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        • R Rob Grainger

          gstolarov wrote:

          I think there is no arguing that Windows today are safer and more stable than any other environment

          Splutters coffee into keyboard - you are kidding right? I like Windows, use and develop for it regularly, but if you seriously think it comes close to being as you describe, I'd never let you work on my servers.

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          gstolarov
          wrote on last edited by
          #77

          I did Unix, Linux, AIX, and now trying OSX. My impression is - it's all depends on how much you pile up on it. And as far as as can see nothing can compare to Windows by universality. I mean we all expect to go and get $5 video card, $40 hard drive from unknown manufacturer, random app off the web and expect Window to take it. Not really the case for other environments. And even at that the machines can and do go on for a while assuming you don't futz with it - recently I had a Windows 2003 server hard drive crash on the machine that was setup by the person who quit 4 years ago, had to be rebooted twice during this time and no one remembers where it is - and this is not an exception as I can see for an average Windows server. And also spilling coffee onto the hardware....

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          • G gstolarov

            I did Unix, Linux, AIX, and now trying OSX. My impression is - it's all depends on how much you pile up on it. And as far as as can see nothing can compare to Windows by universality. I mean we all expect to go and get $5 video card, $40 hard drive from unknown manufacturer, random app off the web and expect Window to take it. Not really the case for other environments. And even at that the machines can and do go on for a while assuming you don't futz with it - recently I had a Windows 2003 server hard drive crash on the machine that was setup by the person who quit 4 years ago, had to be rebooted twice during this time and no one remembers where it is - and this is not an exception as I can see for an average Windows server. And also spilling coffee onto the hardware....

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            Rob Grainger
            wrote on last edited by
            #78

            Hardware compatibility != safety/stability. Yes, Windows runs on lots more hardware, but that's an entirely different issue. If you run, for example, SE Linux on supported hardware and configure it correctly its virtually impossible to hack. I cannot imagine any Windows version where that could be said.

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            • B BobJanova

              Every game I know has botting as an insta-ban offence. But they can be hard to detect and ban evasion can be almost impossible to prevent, particularly given dynamic IPs and VMs.

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              Rob Grainger
              wrote on last edited by
              #79

              I guess that's unsurprising, otherwise there wouldn't be much of a problem. To be honest - I tend to avoid online games for a combination of reasons, much as I avoid many online forums, just because I find many people who frequent such things intolerable. Code Project is one exception to the latter, but so far I've not perservered with any game long enough to find one tolerable. I do enjoy gaming, but gave up with net games at about Quake III.

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              • L Lost User

                Legally you are right, but then don't forget that much hacking software is also used for security testing. Morally.. hell no.

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                richard_k
                wrote on last edited by
                #80

                In this case, I think morality and legality happen to agree (there are many cases where I don't think they agree). You'll have to explain yourself rather than say 'hell no' before I think you have a real point. Secondly.. are you saying the hacking software is released by these companies? Pretty sure that is not the case. And given that they don't, it just reinforces my point. If the security companies understand it only has malicious intent when 'released into the wild'.. it is further proof that those that *do* release it *do* have malicious intent. I know folks that work in that part of the software industry. Its a constant battle to keep up.. and they take all that very seriously. Again, your points are falling flat.

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                • L Lost User

                  I've been enjoying online games for about 12 years. In every online game I've played sooner or later someone develops a hack (aimbot, speed hack, etc) and makes a little bit of money marketing it to other players. For a recent example see the Mass Murder hack for Battlefield 3: Mass Murder[^] There are a couple of things that I understand: 1: I understand developing such a hack can be a fun challenge. 2: I understand that the hack has a humorous side to it. That said, in the end a bunch of paying customers for a company are having their entertainment ruined by people who obviously have no interest in playing the game with any integrity. Time and time again I've seen hundreds, and even thousands of people, disrupted because of these sorts of hacks. This seems to be a threat to real people's livelyhood and it ruins the fun for many paying customers. I know it seems draconian, but I'd like to see hard jail time for the people who develop these programs. Somehow, I think if I could program McDonald's coffee machines to spray the interior of restaurant that I'd get some jail time for that behavior. If I could program Ford automobiles to flash their lights randomly or cause city buses to be late there would also be severe punishment. Maybe I'm getting old - but one thing I really dislike about the internet is the sub-culture that seems to feed off making other people's lives miserable. It would be nice to read about these "shops" getting busted up and some hacker kiddies getting slapped around a bit. I realize the hacks are not dangerous and these are games, it's just the opportunistic mindset of a n'vr-do-well that bugs me to no end. It's like they wake up and think: Oh, a new game. How can I ruin it for thousands of people? Weeding these folks out of the gene pool would be good for the long term success of human kind. Too harsh?

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                  patbob
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #81

                  The game is implemented wrong. The clients are responsible for the wrong things and the server doesn't check that they aren't hacked (or does so in an easy-to-defeat way). These are noob SW design mistakes, so the implementors are complicit in this. If you send the hackers to jail, then you need to send the implementors too, and then who'd be left to implement the next game (and who would want to take the risk). You can get all worked up about this, or you can vote with your feet and move along to a new game implemented by a different team. Continuing to play this game is only making it more valuable to the implementors, validating their decision to not care too much about when hacks appear and how disruptive they become.

                  We can program with only 1's, but if all you've got are zeros, you've got nothing.

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                  • V Vark111

                    I don't think it can be called ragequitting if your girlfriend entices you away from the game. We need a new word for this. brewquit, sexquit, lifequit?

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                    richard_k
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #82

                    Lol.. I seriuosly need to get more sexquitting into my online gaming.

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                    • R richard_k

                      In this case, I think morality and legality happen to agree (there are many cases where I don't think they agree). You'll have to explain yourself rather than say 'hell no' before I think you have a real point. Secondly.. are you saying the hacking software is released by these companies? Pretty sure that is not the case. And given that they don't, it just reinforces my point. If the security companies understand it only has malicious intent when 'released into the wild'.. it is further proof that those that *do* release it *do* have malicious intent. I know folks that work in that part of the software industry. Its a constant battle to keep up.. and they take all that very seriously. Again, your points are falling flat.

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                      Lost User
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #83

                      I see. You are a troll. Have a nice day.

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                      • P patbob

                        The game is implemented wrong. The clients are responsible for the wrong things and the server doesn't check that they aren't hacked (or does so in an easy-to-defeat way). These are noob SW design mistakes, so the implementors are complicit in this. If you send the hackers to jail, then you need to send the implementors too, and then who'd be left to implement the next game (and who would want to take the risk). You can get all worked up about this, or you can vote with your feet and move along to a new game implemented by a different team. Continuing to play this game is only making it more valuable to the implementors, validating their decision to not care too much about when hacks appear and how disruptive they become.

                        We can program with only 1's, but if all you've got are zeros, you've got nothing.

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                        Lost User
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #84

                        One of the most common hacks is a radar hack. Since the server has to send the location of other players to the client I don't see how you'd prevent a 3rd party program from gathering that information and displaying all of it in a way that gives teh cheater an advantage. I don't think there is a single FPS that has been developed yet that hasn't been hacked. Based on your post I either have to write off every single game studio as being populated by slack-jawed morons or I have to accept the fact that preventing cheating is a bit more complex than what you suggest.

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                        • B BobJanova

                          His point is that a cheat program is no different to the two analogues which, as you agree, are actually illegal. So so should cheat programs be.

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                          unitrunker
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #85

                          a cheat program is no different to the two analogues which, as you agree, are actually illegal.

                          They are different. A cheat program changes game play. It may violate a civil contract but it does not steal money or a service. It changes the experience of game play, that's it. No free petrol. No transfer of funds out of a victim's account. Some cheat programs have legitimate uses in testing and QA. A game engine company sells you a 3D game engine with tools to expedite testing. Those same tools could be used to cheat. Should the game engine designers be arrested for providing these extra tools? Law makers would have a tough time drafting language to distinguish between the two. I agree that playing with cheats is no fun. Someone ruined your afternoon of game play. It sucks. I'm sorry. Bottom line - for me - is this is a civil matter. The game industry should handle this issue on it's own. Gerbil is correct to say I don't want new laws. I'd like to see some old, obsolete US laws removed (but that's another story). That's my position. If you think a law is needed, how would that work? How would you structure the language so that the people creating the games aren't themselves criminalized thereby stifling game quality, innovation, and competition.

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                          • L Lost User

                            I see. You are a troll. Have a nice day.

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                            richard_k
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #86

                            LOL.. no.. just interested in this topic. I'm asking legitimate questions about the points you raise. You've made your choices.. its all cool.

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                            • L Lost User

                              I've been enjoying online games for about 12 years. In every online game I've played sooner or later someone develops a hack (aimbot, speed hack, etc) and makes a little bit of money marketing it to other players. For a recent example see the Mass Murder hack for Battlefield 3: Mass Murder[^] There are a couple of things that I understand: 1: I understand developing such a hack can be a fun challenge. 2: I understand that the hack has a humorous side to it. That said, in the end a bunch of paying customers for a company are having their entertainment ruined by people who obviously have no interest in playing the game with any integrity. Time and time again I've seen hundreds, and even thousands of people, disrupted because of these sorts of hacks. This seems to be a threat to real people's livelyhood and it ruins the fun for many paying customers. I know it seems draconian, but I'd like to see hard jail time for the people who develop these programs. Somehow, I think if I could program McDonald's coffee machines to spray the interior of restaurant that I'd get some jail time for that behavior. If I could program Ford automobiles to flash their lights randomly or cause city buses to be late there would also be severe punishment. Maybe I'm getting old - but one thing I really dislike about the internet is the sub-culture that seems to feed off making other people's lives miserable. It would be nice to read about these "shops" getting busted up and some hacker kiddies getting slapped around a bit. I realize the hacks are not dangerous and these are games, it's just the opportunistic mindset of a n'vr-do-well that bugs me to no end. It's like they wake up and think: Oh, a new game. How can I ruin it for thousands of people? Weeding these folks out of the gene pool would be good for the long term success of human kind. Too harsh?

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                              cruisefx
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #87

                              If companies would start interpreting these folk as misguided genius (provided that they are the ones that wrote the 'sploit), then I'm sure that it would put a damper on the overall scheme of it. There is that sense of mistrust, however. In a way it is much like interpreting drug kingpins as great businessmen (able to handle a lot of stress, great organizational skills). But comfort to some is worth more than a "life of crime". Successfully "weeding" out THESE individuals would be worthwhile to the overall economy. The FBI already does this at Defcon. You mention genes in this. I'm sure that law enforcement is interested in identifying that "criminal gene", and they are indeed serious about it - in the United States they collect DNA from criminals after a felony is committed. However, I am sure that their system is not perfect. I'm sure they would be able to find this gene in those that follow dangerous pursuits in life, such as stock market warriors.

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                              • L Lost User

                                I've been enjoying online games for about 12 years. In every online game I've played sooner or later someone develops a hack (aimbot, speed hack, etc) and makes a little bit of money marketing it to other players. For a recent example see the Mass Murder hack for Battlefield 3: Mass Murder[^] There are a couple of things that I understand: 1: I understand developing such a hack can be a fun challenge. 2: I understand that the hack has a humorous side to it. That said, in the end a bunch of paying customers for a company are having their entertainment ruined by people who obviously have no interest in playing the game with any integrity. Time and time again I've seen hundreds, and even thousands of people, disrupted because of these sorts of hacks. This seems to be a threat to real people's livelyhood and it ruins the fun for many paying customers. I know it seems draconian, but I'd like to see hard jail time for the people who develop these programs. Somehow, I think if I could program McDonald's coffee machines to spray the interior of restaurant that I'd get some jail time for that behavior. If I could program Ford automobiles to flash their lights randomly or cause city buses to be late there would also be severe punishment. Maybe I'm getting old - but one thing I really dislike about the internet is the sub-culture that seems to feed off making other people's lives miserable. It would be nice to read about these "shops" getting busted up and some hacker kiddies getting slapped around a bit. I realize the hacks are not dangerous and these are games, it's just the opportunistic mindset of a n'vr-do-well that bugs me to no end. It's like they wake up and think: Oh, a new game. How can I ruin it for thousands of people? Weeding these folks out of the gene pool would be good for the long term success of human kind. Too harsh?

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                                Terry gilman
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #88

                                Did you really just say give hard jail time to people who hack games? Come on, like we don't have enough people in prison now. Virtual hard time I'd agree with (i.e. banning from the game for using hacks...which I believe has been done by some vendors). To me, it's the responsibility of the game developers and the ones making money off the games to enforce the laws (or to go wild west if they so desire).

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                                • R richard_k

                                  LOL.. no.. just interested in this topic. I'm asking legitimate questions about the points you raise. You've made your choices.. its all cool.

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                                  Lost User
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #89

                                  Are you sure? So you did not deliberately misinterpret my argument, but accidentally? As for the morality, it's hard to discuss at all. There are no facts there, just opinions.

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                                  • L Lost User

                                    Scenerio: 1: You and your friends invest big $$$ to develop a game. 2: You and your friends work endless hours on the game. 3: You and your friends invest additional $$$ to market the game. 4: You and your friends get 100,000 happy customers. Then some chuckle-head puts together a hack in his spare time and is now making money off a cheat that allows a small percentage of your customers to make thousands of your honest customers angry. Questions: How much income would such a cheat have to cost you before you saw it has a problem? How much developer time would you have to waste addressing these hacks (instead of adding new content) before you saw this has a problem? Serious questions - because I don't understand the mindset that holds that freedom includes the right to destroy other people's work.

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                                    austin hamman
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #90

                                    you develop big money on a game and dont include provisions against hacks, or provide poor provisions you deserve what you got. and spending time developing against this is time well spent, it is knowledge you can use next time you make a game so you know what is and isnt exploitable. in the end its a game, that's it. if you are so passionate about it that you wish the cheaters to be thrown in jail you really need to get out more. its ultimately the job of the developers to make ways to counter cheating, prevent cheating from being possible at all, and/or detect cheating when it happens. if they can't detect the cheaters the law wont be able to do anything either. just let it go, complain to the company if you must, and if its rendered unplayable...play something else.

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                                    • L Lost User

                                      One of the most common hacks is a radar hack. Since the server has to send the location of other players to the client I don't see how you'd prevent a 3rd party program from gathering that information and displaying all of it in a way that gives teh cheater an advantage. I don't think there is a single FPS that has been developed yet that hasn't been hacked. Based on your post I either have to write off every single game studio as being populated by slack-jawed morons or I have to accept the fact that preventing cheating is a bit more complex than what you suggest.

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                                      patbob
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #91

                                      You are right, a radar hack would be pretty hard to prevent. However, the example given later in the thread was that of one player hacking their client to allow their projectiles to be fired through walls across the playing field. And in my opinion, allowing that kind of hack to intermingle with unhacked players without giving them a choice, does require slack jawed morons. It means they chose to make each client responsible for the characteristics of its own projectiles with no server validation. I can see the reason for that kind of design -- it spreads more of the compute load onto the clients and reduces latency -- but it also leaves one's design open to hacks. Worse, they implemented this design with an easy-to-defeat (or maybe nonexistant) check to ensure only non-hacked (or similarily hacked) clients are allowed to play together on their servers. Again, I can see the value in that as it fosters a community of hackers who enjoy seeing what they can make the clients do. Personally, I see fostering such communities of hackers as a good thing, but allowing them to intermix and play against users running unmodified clients without giving players a choice in the matter is a poor design choice -- it ruins the game for players running unmodified clients, as the OP expressed. There's no way to prevent any game from being hacked, but the solution isn't a SW one, its a psychological one -- foster a hack community by making it easy to hack, track the various hacks via some kind of free registration, then allow players to choose which hacks they're willing to play against. Sorry, I've rambled a bit.

                                      We can program with only 1's, but if all you've got are zeros, you've got nothing.

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                                      • R Rob Grainger

                                        Hardware compatibility != safety/stability. Yes, Windows runs on lots more hardware, but that's an entirely different issue. If you run, for example, SE Linux on supported hardware and configure it correctly its virtually impossible to hack. I cannot imagine any Windows version where that could be said.

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                                        gstolarov
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #92

                                        Everything is hackable given time and resources. It just seems to me that not too many people care to hack Linux or those other OSs. Case in point Apple. As iPod/iPad push it to prominance, here is much more talk about viruses and hacking on OSX.

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                                        • U unitrunker

                                          a cheat program is no different to the two analogues which, as you agree, are actually illegal.

                                          They are different. A cheat program changes game play. It may violate a civil contract but it does not steal money or a service. It changes the experience of game play, that's it. No free petrol. No transfer of funds out of a victim's account. Some cheat programs have legitimate uses in testing and QA. A game engine company sells you a 3D game engine with tools to expedite testing. Those same tools could be used to cheat. Should the game engine designers be arrested for providing these extra tools? Law makers would have a tough time drafting language to distinguish between the two. I agree that playing with cheats is no fun. Someone ruined your afternoon of game play. It sucks. I'm sorry. Bottom line - for me - is this is a civil matter. The game industry should handle this issue on it's own. Gerbil is correct to say I don't want new laws. I'd like to see some old, obsolete US laws removed (but that's another story). That's my position. If you think a law is needed, how would that work? How would you structure the language so that the people creating the games aren't themselves criminalized thereby stifling game quality, innovation, and competition.

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                                          Lost User
                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #93

                                          unitrunker wrote:

                                          They are different. A cheat program changes game play. It may violate a civil contract but it does not steal money or a service. It changes the experience of game play, that's it. No free petrol. No transfer of funds out of a victim's account.

                                          I appreciate the difference that you're trying to make but I don't think it's legitimate. You've elevated "money" as the arbitrator of whether or not something is criminal or civil. If "money" (theft of funds or free services) was the determining factor then rape wouldn't be crime as long as the criminal didn't take the victim's purse. The same point could be made for things like attempted homicide and so forth. To say it "changes the experience of game play" grossly understates the problem. If it were a single player game nobody would care - however, these hackers are hacking a service and ruining it for other people so that they are driven away from the service. I understand about not wanting new laws but new technology demands it. We wouldn't need a speed limit without cars - but alas, new technology comes with it's own set of abuses and it has to be addressed.

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