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3/28/12 12:50:24 AM#61
Originally posted by Kickaxe wonder why that is... |
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Vannor
Elite Member
Joined: 8/11/03
I am the lucid dream. BOW DOWN BEFORE THE GOD OF DEATH! |
3/28/12 12:51:50 AM#62
Originally posted by //\\//\\oo I'm sure they might get away with it, but they were given the privilage to try out the game ahead of almost 2 million other people and are abusing that privilage. He signed the NDA.. he risks the ban through his actions. There is a reason why the press sign a different agreement, that agreement permits them from talking about 'certain' things. There are loads of people in multiple threads now egging this guy on and encouraging him to talk about beta. Eventually he will say something that he shouldn't and could cause a whole host of negative outcomes. I get that he loves the game, fantastic, but he could cause more bad than good concerning something that wouldn't reflect the final product. Some of us uphold NDAs. There are millions of people who would have loved to have been given the chance he had. |
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3/28/12 1:00:23 AM#63
Originally posted by SuperXero89 I'm fighting the urge to answer your rhetorical, Super. :p
But I'm not sure that I understand your implication, nonetheless. Elaborate? |
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3/28/12 1:03:42 AM#64
Originally posted by Vannor
NDAs are in place to protect the company. That is their purpose; to prevent others from leaking information that could damage their reputation and/or product. He promoted their product by citing a single example that more than likely could be found on youtube, or other media.
You report NDA violations when they damage the product, not help it. The only reason people like you report is pure Schadenfreude and nothing else. You don't care about the game, you don't care about the contract, you just want to see somebody suffer. Whether it's a serial killer, rapist, inquisitor, etc. it all boils down to a person deriving pleasure from the misery of another.
In an abstract sense, you are not better than any of the above.
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Vannor
Elite Member
Joined: 8/11/03
I am the lucid dream. BOW DOWN BEFORE THE GOD OF DEATH! |
3/28/12 1:08:52 AM#65
Originally posted by //\\//\\oo I edited that post a little after you started quoting it. But no, that's not the reason I do it. I don't want him banned from the game, I want him to stop talking about the beta. This is about principles and morals. Thousands of testers want to do what he is doing but they don't.. why does this guy get to do it instead of them? |
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3/28/12 1:09:25 AM#66
Originally posted by //\\//\\oo So its ok to break NDA if the thing your leaking is 'good'? What is 'good' to one person is equally 'bad' to another, its all subject to opinion. Secondly what happens if the 'good' thing the guy talked about gets changed or removed before release, wouldnt that then have an adverse effect? NDA's are in place for a reason. Just because something is leaked that puts the game in a favourable light to you doesnt mean its ok to leak it. |
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3/28/12 1:15:23 AM#67
Do we really have nothing else more productive to do tonight than whine at someone for breaking the NDA? |
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3/28/12 1:18:11 AM#68
forum pvp dude, it's the best pvp out there |
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3/28/12 1:21:40 AM#69
Originally posted by davestr1zl
There is nothing subjective about "good", or "bad" when talking about financial ramifications. The NDA is in place to prevent people from leaking information that will lead to lower profit. Since random people cannot be trusted to ascertain what is "good", or "bad", they have an NDA in place. If somebody leaks information that leads to a positive change in profit, it cannot be bad, regardless of how much of an NDA violation it is.
You could punish the person, but for what? To prevent further NDA breaches? The entire concept of NDAs in beta (and not from employees) is ludicrous, since it is nearly impossible to enforce. Maybe laws like SOPA and PIPA will change that in the future, but until it becomes a crime to use a proxy, or you are forced to have a static IP, it's nothing more than an issue of damage control to put an upper bound on how much you can lose financially from idiots complaining about features that aren't complete. I suppose that all of this will be deleted and rightfully so, but I just had to speak my mind.
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3/28/12 1:24:06 AM#70
People are always going to break NDAs. Crying about it isn't productive in the least. Report the guy to mmorpg.com or Anet if you must and move on. |
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3/28/12 1:30:19 AM#71
Originally posted by Vannor
It seems that live and let live isn't one of your principles. What he divulged, if it is even an NDA breach, is so trivial and does not fit the criteria of a damaging leak. The dangerous and blind enforcement of laws, morals and traditions is pretty much what constituted the dark ages. When people can't reason for themselves, or rely on authorities for all of their guidance, then they cease to be human beings and become implements. You obviously aren't blindly following laws/rules, but want to see his head on a platter for whatever reason.
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Vannor
Elite Member
Joined: 8/11/03
I am the lucid dream. BOW DOWN BEFORE THE GOD OF DEATH! |
3/28/12 1:48:32 AM#72
Originally posted by //\\//\\oo I've already said in the post you just quoted that I only want the beta talk to stop and that's all. Ignore what I said if you want and assume I'm not telling the truth. There's nothing else I can do except repeat myself. I actually hope he doesn't get banned and just realises he should stop talking about it. And for the record, just saying you were in the beta in a public way is an NDA breach. He has 100% broken the NDA by doing that alone. That is a fact, not an opinion, determined by what he himself agreed to. |
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3/28/12 3:15:23 AM#73
Originally posted by BlahTeeb Questing, well fed-ex styled WoW questing was always boring and bland and is the reason why I will never, ever, ever play another WoW quest style game as long as I live. The only way to do character progression right is 1 of 3 ways.
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3/28/12 4:28:54 AM#74
Originally posted by //\\//\\oo Bullshit alert. He's got as many negative things to say about games as positive. Many games he completely rakes over the coals. I guess those are the ones that, what -- didn't pay him off enough? Even as he's overall postive about his GW2 coverage, he points out several weaknesses that other "entertainers" gloss over or simply ignore. Seems to me that if he was "promoting a product", he wouldn't be anywhere near as forthcoming about the problems and potential pitfalls that he describes. He's obviously not earning his keep, is he? Seems that anyone who actually likes GW2 is a "fanboy" or a paid stooge these days.
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3/28/12 5:08:28 AM#75
Originally posted by Distopia He uses a couple of different styles of video. The first is where is makes comments specifically on a game he is playing and those always do refer to exactly what is happening on video. That's how the "WTF is..." series works. The other style is more like an editorial piece where he covers a number of subjects, makes comments and offers opinion, but instead of using background video as a direct reference, it's there as a moving backdrop to an article offered in verbal format. This is how his Mailbag series works. In that one, he takes viewer questions on nearly any topic and the roles some generic game footage in the background, usually whatever he has lying around that's long enough. Recently, it's been Tribes Ascend because he's been playing it a lot. Oddly enough, his questions rarely if ever are about Tribes Ascend. The footage is only there because it's a video medium and he can't very well have a static, blank background for it. The video you are referring to is an editorial addressing a number of GW2 related topics and he is simply rolling some of his GW2 video behind it because it would be stupid to be rolling Tribes Ascend instead. The Charrzooka video is an example of the former style where he his commenting on what's happening on the screen. The editorial is no different than a text review showing stock screenshots of a game, simply because they break up what would otherwise be a wall of text. They aren't there necessarily to support the content of the text. They are just there as eyecandy. Example: http://www.rockpapershotgun.com/2012/03/26/guild-wars-2-beta-preview/ You may not agree with that style of commentary but his viewers are familiar with it and understand it. |
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3/28/12 6:32:46 AM#76
Originally posted by Unlight
Herp derp. Right, so he'd just let his credibility tank if he didn't criticize anything? Every review needs some criticism to make it plausible. He's not a stooge, he's an entertainer, which is what every professional game reviewer is, just like the Yogscast. The difference is in his style, but it is still in the same vein, even if it is more subtle.
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3/28/12 6:45:47 AM#77
I enjoy TB videos but disagree with many of his comments. One on the comments in his recent GW2 video really annoyed me. He says that the game should not tell players how many of x the player has to kill/gather to complete the quest. Nothing gets boring faster than killing/gathering when you have no idea how many of x that you have to kill/gather. It is similar to the frustration of low drops (boar livers for example). I don't mind if I have to kill 50 mobs (well maybe 50 might be a bit much) if I know that I have to kill 50. I have a goal and I know where I am in progression. |
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3/28/12 6:48:36 AM#78
Originally posted by tordurbar i think in some cases it helps you determine if you have time for the event or not too. |
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3/28/12 7:00:15 AM#79
Poeple can trash talk all they want but one thing is sure, i'll watch TB video rather than read those bs articles journalist make, gathering forum comments, and giving a 99% score to review a game 2 days after launch. |
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3/28/12 8:51:40 AM#80
Originally posted by Eir_S Don't forget his complaints that several DEs reset so fast that they cycled back while he was still hanging around in the area 5 minutes later, which, according to TB, was a big immersion breaker. Or his criticism on the poor balance of current DE scaling. Or his explanation of how many DEs tended to devolve into group zerg-fests. Or his complaints about some quests where you mysteriously know the exact number of objects you will need to search under before you find the item your NPC friend is looking for, causing it to become a "look under X rocks" quest. He's clearly a total blind fanboy and doesn't think for himself. |
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