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Gamers Own their Items

Started by Grok, December 19, 2003, 11:28 AM

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Grok

http://www.cnn.com/2003/TECH/fun.games/12/19/china.gamer.reut/index.html

Gamer sues the game host and wins his stuff back.

I wonder if someone can win such a suit in the United States, and what affect it will have on hosts, free or fee.

Hostile

Someone could probably get away with it on an MMORPG, but I don't think any of the companies are dumb enough to actually let it go to court, and depending on Terms Of Service agreements, that might cover them anyways~. Sure, yes blizzard probably could've been sued hundreds of times over for this, but what? This guy was just made, either that or lawyers are really cheap in China. Bottom line: Theres no profit here to be made.

Speaking of lawsuits, Real sucks. I could've sued them a couple years ago.
- Hostile is sexy.

j0k3r

I don't quite think that would work here.

Gaming companies specify (it's a guess here) that everything in game is THEIR property. When you try to post items on ebay and don't specify that it's not yours, the companie's (diablo 2, star wars galaxies) representatives will shut down your auction.
QuoteAnyone attempting to generate random numbers by deterministic means is, of course, living in a state of sin
John Vo

Hitmen

Blizzard has things like this covered perfectly in their ToU. Some companies are dumb though.

iago

Don't forget, this guy spent 10,000 yuan (I hadn't even heard of yuan  till today, but that's another story) on pay-as-you-go cards to accululate the stuff.  That's the money he wanted back, not money for the items themselves.
This'll make an interesting test for broken AV:
QuoteX5O!P%@AP[4\PZX54(P^)7CC)7}$EICAR-STANDARD-ANTIVIRUS-TEST-FILE!$H+H*