| 677 posts found | |
|---|---|
|
7/07/10 6:22:49 PM#181
Originally posted by SaintViktor
Prepaid cards + use of fake names = Free troll
The only ones suffering would be the honest players
And tbh its the fact the forums are so hostile on WoW i wouldn't ever trust it with my name . EDIT: something i also read up , don't you think the simple fact making a WoW account suddenly gets you a huge load of spam makes you distrust everything related to it ? Fere libenter homines id quod volunt credunt. |
|
|
7/07/10 6:23:03 PM#182
That's great and all, but we're not talking about people doing anything illegal on the internet here. I am actually protected from unlawful search and seizure, and my name is part of that. It is lawful to refuse presenting your ID to a police officer unless they are requesting it in good faith (ie they believe you have commited a crime). If a police officer's authority doesn't supercede my right to privacy then your average forum goer certainly does not either. No one on these forums is committing a crime and no one on a forum has the right to their name.
|
|
|
7/07/10 6:23:11 PM#183
Originally posted by Nytakito What you said in red is true. To a point. The police would find out your real name and other departments would learn about your Alias. However not everyone in your city or town unless it was very small would even know. So your anonymity would still be in place. So in this situation Blizzrd is the police. They know your Alias. Forum and they also know your real name through your account. They can just take care of it iternally. |
|
|
7/07/10 6:24:34 PM#184
Originally posted by generals3 Exactly. Trolls can use pre paid cards to avoid this with silly names. It hurts the people who really need help. It hurts the people who may actually have something useful or helpful. Trolls and people like them ALWAYS find a way around these obstructions. But instead of most of them being regulated to over the internet threats and harrassment, blizzard is going to allow them to take it to a much more personal level. |
|
|
7/07/10 6:24:59 PM#185
I am incredibly sad for humanity knowing that there are people who not only don't see a problem with what they're doing, but at in fact DEFENDING it. And you wonder why Nigerian scams work.... Bans a perma, but so are sigs in necro posts. EAT ME MMORPG.com! |
|
|
7/07/10 6:25:38 PM#186
Originally posted by SaintViktor The bad people will still be around. Except instead of flaming you on a message board, they will call your house lol. EQ1, EQ2, SWG, SWTOR, GW, CoH, CoV, FFXI, WoW, CO, War,TSW and a slew of free trials and beta tests |
|
|
ThomasN7
Hard Core Member
Joined: 3/17/07
"Had to be me. Someone else might have gotten it wrong.” - Mordin Solus |
7/07/10 6:29:38 PM#187
Originally posted by Amathe LOL. Ok lets not get too paranoid now. I never post on Blizzard official forums so this does not effect me either way. Even going back 10 years on Battle.net servers there was no need for me to ever use chat rooms. All I did was just play and associate with the people who I was playing with in the game. |
|
7/07/10 6:29:43 PM#188
dangerous to the point of recklessness.
|
|
|
7/07/10 6:30:21 PM#189
Originally posted by Nytakito This is an interesting topic. I am only a couple years off of you in age (according to our profiles here) and I have almost a complete opposite view on anonimity. Not to imply anything by that, just that I find it an interesting illustration of how polarizing the issue can be. Otherwise, as I posted in response to someone else, you are constitutionally guaranteed the right to anonymous speech (albeit a private company can certainly moderate their forums as they see fit), but I'll certainly agree with the belief that, as with any right, a person has the obligation to use it responsibly or risk losing it. After all, as the saying goes (paraphrased), my right to swing my fist stops before it hits your face. Again though, specific to Blizzard's move, I think increased moderation of their forums would accomplish the same goals they are seeking to achieve. I, as a customer, derive no value from my name being displayed, if I choose to participate in their forums, and thus, I can't find a reason to support it. Not even a privacy issue there. Just a matter of "what's in it for me" and I don't believe the assumption that this will curtail trolling as I have seen enough anecdotal evidence to suggest otherwise. -mklinic "There's a point I think we're missing. |
|
|
Kyleran
Bitter Vet™
Joined: 9/13/06
Fools find no pleasure in understanding, but delight in airing their own opinions. Pvbs 18:2, NIV |
7/07/10 6:31:18 PM#190
Originally posted by Amathe Damn, how'd you guess my name? OK, that's not really it, but mine is actually that unique (only one of me in the world) and yes, screwed is exactly how I feel about this. If I was currently subscribed to a Blizzard game I'd quit, and I certainly won't be buying SC2 and D3, which was money in the bank for Blizz before this. "What gamers want ... is new game play patterns different from what they've experienced before" - Axehilt |
|
7/07/10 6:31:44 PM#191
Originally posted by Amathe Or like Hitler said in his angry video about this: "Now i can't even post on the forums without some mad man ordering pizza to my house" Fere libenter homines id quod volunt credunt. |
|
|
7/07/10 6:36:09 PM#192
Btw, to anyone thinking "oh it will never be a problem 8D Just teaches them dern kids they cant hide behind anonymity 8D" (which I will remind you, as your name means as little as your avatars name without context, the fear your supposedly invoking in trolls is that of the context that can be garnered via their name, IE: Their location and various other information that can link the name to their physical self. Basically, you're condining the system because the threat of violent and criminal reprocussion will keep them in check...) lets just see how it worked out for a Mod that decided to try and prop up the "feature". "Example? At one point in the huge Real ID thread on Bliz's site, a GM popped in to say "Hey I think Real ID is a good idea!" and posted his real name on the thread. Within minutes his physical address, email address and phone number were posted in a reply. Thanks to the quick "delete" fingers of the Blizzard mods it was removed almost instantly; but the damage was done" -GUcomics Anyone who has used the internet for any appreciable length of time knows how stupid this is. Still don't believe me? Head on over to 4chan with your real name and be mr "IRL toughguy" there and ask for your "docs". Enjoy. Bans a perma, but so are sigs in necro posts. EAT ME MMORPG.com! |
|
|
7/07/10 6:36:09 PM#193
Originally posted by Otiro They do moderate their forums, and they do have internal means of taking care of things, and over the last 6 years or so I'm pretty sure they have done alot internally to alleviate this. So there are a couple ways to look at it (probably more but I'll list what comes to mind quickest) 1) They have enough data collected to know within a fairly high degree of certainty that this applies to a small enough percentage of the community that they can whether the initial sub loss (which will be small). or 2) They simply don't care, and have made enough off of WoW and other games (plus up and coming releases) that they feel this is the right thing to do regardless of community reaction. Take your pick, but if I were in Blizzard's position, I would want as much security as possible, and while this may sound VERY counter intuitive to modern thought, the availability of information isn't the danger, it is what other companies will allow you to do with minimal information that is really the culprit... I'm talking ID theft etc. here.. Predation and stuff.. Well, that's the flip side of the coin.. The harder it is for people to be anonymous online, the harder it is for a predator to find his prey, regardless of the available information, simply becasue the predators actions are tracable, in real time. OK, I'm borderline Wall of Text here, so I'll wrap it up.. Yes, The police/Blizzard analogy is weak, but the point behind the anology is still what is at heart. The problem isn't the availability of information. The problem is what you can do with said available information now, that you couldn't 20 years ago. The solution lies not in hiding the information, but making that information useless to anybody but it's rightful owner. Exposing real names is a very small step in the right direction. |
|
|
7/07/10 6:39:51 PM#194
Right direction toward a big brother state? |
|
|
7/07/10 6:45:24 PM#195
Originally posted by Kordesh See, that is a bad example, simply because we know more than just his real name. We already know he works for Blizzard, so we can narrow down the region of search to say, a 50 mile radius from Blizzard's headquarters. |
|
|
7/07/10 6:46:33 PM#196
I want to point this picture out. This guy has a few very commenly used mods installed. It's now showing REAL Names, of people who he does NOT know NOR are they on his REALID friends list.....
http://img10.imageshack.us/img10/6942/ridmover.jpg
To people who STILL think blizzard is doing this to "clean up the forums", really, wipe off your nose and get real. This is for more money and contacts with facebook. They could EASILY find thousands of people willing to mod the forums for free, but they "choose" this. |
|
|
7/07/10 6:48:06 PM#197
So anonymity through obscurity is good. Not sure how that's different than anonymity through an alias except those with unique RL names have less protection under one system and equal protection under the other. |
|
|
7/07/10 6:52:10 PM#198
Originally posted by noquarter Not really , a big brother state is a state where the government knows all of your moves . In this case the government would be blizzard . No what this leads to is ANARCHY , which is even worse than a police state . (in a police state the government only has the power to abuse while in anarachy everyone has it . And before only blizzard could abuse your personal data , now any random troll could abuse your real name . So ye: anarchy.) Fere libenter homines id quod volunt credunt. |
|
|
7/07/10 6:52:45 PM#199
Originally posted by noquarter LOL, yeah, if your legal name is something like Dweezle-Harpy Sunshine-Snowblower, guess that does make the search a tad simpler. We're arguing from points of views from different generations... I'll pose this question. If it's so bad to post your real name online, how come the most popular website in the world now is Facebook? I'll admit, I still don't use facebook, never saw the attraction to it.. Maybe it's because I never got along with the jerks I was stuck going to school with, or perhaps becasue I dumped my ex's for good reasons and have no desire to hook up with them, ever again.. |
|
|
7/07/10 6:58:28 PM#200
Originally posted by Nytakito Because half the world is brain dead and Facebook has a lot of them. The amount of absurd stories i heard about it is just mind boggling . "Mr X got caught by the tax inspection because he shared pictures of an abnormal wealth (i guess fancy cars and such) on facebook which caught the attention of the tax (whats their name again?)" . Or about people telling things like "im going to the bathroom now" on facebook. Or better employees who tell their employers they can't work because they're sick and than post images of them on holiday => Bam FIRED! So ye . Or other people use it just like they use MSN and don't share their information with anyone who is not their facebook friends . Fere libenter homines id quod volunt credunt. |
|