by BuZeR » 14 Jun 12, 5:18 pm
Lumen Melano wrote:realOne wrote:In the future I hope there will be a law against cheating in online gaming and those caught and proven guilty will have to pay a fine or get sent to jail.
You've got to be kidding right? Cheating in a game becomes a criminal offence? I think your idiotic idea is at odds with your reverence for Anonymous and their values.
I sort of agree with him, not jail time, but maybe making it a criminal offence? Why not. I hate how the anonymous factor of the internet turns every 3rd person into a battle hardened, **** spouting retard - only because they don’t need to be held accountable for their actions.
I can’t walk into a shop and abuse everyone, then break all of the stock w/o ending up facing criminal action. Hell you can already be jailed, fined and prosecuted for downloading music... So it would not even surprise me if it is introduced (be it a long way away).
All games have to potential to be at the whim of hackers, this is only mitigated if they are an AAA+ game that can afford to spend millions of dollars in their development stages safeguarding it, but even then it costs a lot of money to keep on top of it. Some games, Homefront comes to mind, lost millions of dollars in sales because of hackers ruining the MP of that game. Why should game companies (and in the end, consumers) have to pay millions of dollars to anti cheat protection...?
Hacking a game/website is far from a victimless crime.
Besides, our society is full of laws to help contain the decencies of everyday living. As the internet is becoming more and more a part of our life, the law will be changed to reflect this. There are laws that stop my neighbor from blasting music at night, there are laws that stop you from drinking in a public place. These actions don’t directly 'hurt' anyone as such, they are there to help maintain the minimum standards we expect from common decency and our society. Why should the Internet be any different?