IainC
Developers
Posts: 6538
Wargaming.net
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From Slashdot. Uncontested so the legal fees were practically free at only 63k, 3 million more as the money made from the service and the rest of the 85 million or so is statutory damages - which is enough to build WoW 2.
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rattran
Moderator
Posts: 4258
Unreasonable
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It would be if they had a hope in hell of collecting that $88mil.
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Rendakor
Terracotta Army
Posts: 10138
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It's not really a freeshard if they made $3 million from it.
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"i can't be a star citizen. they won't even give me a star green card"
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LC
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Posts: 908
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The version of the story I read said 3 million was a made up generous estimate from blizzard.
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Kageru
Terracotta Army
Posts: 4549
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This is news how? Running an unauthorized copy of WoW as a commercial venture is fairly obvious lawyer-bait. And they didn't even bother contesting it. I have some sympathy for "Ethical Piracy" if it's keeping an online game running when the copyright owner is no longer interested in doing so (for example a Hellgate server) but that is hardly a possible argument here. and 88 million of that is Statutory damages not determined in any way by Blizzard? The microtransactions were "donations" and you received "Donation Gear" which was ridiculously statted gear. Totally not worth it, yet you'd see people running around in armor they paid $100 for, generally camping people in front of BT. - (ToxicPopsicle)
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« Last Edit: August 16, 2010, 06:26:33 PM by Kageru »
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Is a man not entitled to the hurf of his durf? - Simond
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Rendakor
Terracotta Army
Posts: 10138
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I'm with Kageru here; I don't see how you can run a WoW Private Server for profit and not expect legal consequences.
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"i can't be a star citizen. they won't even give me a star green card"
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NiX
Wiki Admin
Posts: 7770
Locomotive Pandamonium
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Funny that Blizzard paid 63K to sue someone who never showed up in court and I imagine they'll never get a dime out of them.
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Lantyssa
Terracotta Army
Posts: 20848
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Protection of copyright. It's worth it to their interests and as a deterrent.
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Hahahaha! I'm really good at this!
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Merusk
Terracotta Army
Posts: 27449
Badge Whore
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Yep. If they don't defend it with a suit, then their copyright can away as an assumed forfeiture. (So far as my understanding of copyright goes.) Which would be a very stupid thing to do.
It's the same reason Disney sues daycares that paint their characters on the wall and LucasArts tosses litigation at anything that even looks like a lightsaber. They know it's horrible PR and the masses will pillory them for it, but they have to because if they don't then someone actually looking to illegitimately profit off their IP will seize that opportunity and run with it.
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The past cannot be changed. The future is yet within your power.
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Kageru
Terracotta Army
Posts: 4549
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I believe that only applies for trademarks.
Blizzard doesn't really need a reason and most players are unlikely to notice or care and even less likely to sympathise much with the people who owned or played on it.
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Is a man not entitled to the hurf of his durf? - Simond
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Shatter
Terracotta Army
Posts: 1407
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They wont see a dime of this money
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Trippy
Administrator
Posts: 23657
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I believe that only applies for trademarks.
That's correct.
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Musashi
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Posts: 1692
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I'd have more sympathy if they weren't trying to make money off it.
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AKA Gyoza
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UnSub
Contributor
Posts: 8064
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I don't support pirate servers, but christ, that's excessive damages.
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NiX
Wiki Admin
Posts: 7770
Locomotive Pandamonium
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What kind of statutory damages get up to 88 million? No wonder all US cases have crazy settlements.
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Goreschach
Terracotta Army
Posts: 1546
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The fact that the statutory damages are much, much higher than this ramshackle operation could ever pay is irrelevant. They're set like that because WoW is such a huge moneymaker, and they don't want to give the possibility later down the line of some more well funded group saying "Three million dollars? Lets do this!"
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IainC
Developers
Posts: 6538
Wargaming.net
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What kind of statutory damages get up to 88 million? No wonder all US cases have crazy settlements.
It was calculated as $200 per user and there were apparently 427,000 or so active accounts. Court documents show 40k or so active users in one month which is in the same ballpark as many legitimate MMOs (that aren't WOW obviously).
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Tmon
Terracotta Army
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The fact that the statutory damages are much, much higher than this ramshackle operation could ever pay is irrelevant. They're set like that because WoW is such a huge moneymaker, and they don't want to give the possibility later down the line of some more well funded group saying "Three million dollars? Lets do this!"
Blizzard doesn't set the statutory damage amount, that is the penalty amount set by law.
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Ingmar
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Posts: 19280
Auto Assault Affectionado
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The Transcendent One: AH... THE ROGUE CONSTRUCT. Nordom: Sense of closure: imminent.
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Dark_MadMax
Terracotta Army
Posts: 405
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One one side this was commercial server. - Make no mistake about it , some private wow servers make surprising amount of money. I dont remember all the details but there was scandal in emu community about some private server shard where some .. bitc.. ahem .. unscrupulous women... owned a shard and it was disclosed she made something in the tune of millions of dollars ( scandal was about the part that she didnt pay developers/support staff who actually ran it)
But on the other hand I always considered private wow servers a possbile holy grail of indy mmo gaming. WoW client is top notch and on servers side they achieved quality and stability on par with what blizzard provides ( I even played on one for a while , but didnt want level/gear grind ). Having solid client server for mmo is half the job.
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Dark_MadMax
Terracotta Army
Posts: 405
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Also now that I am thinking about legal implications, I am kinda puzzled how they were found liable for what their clients did . Because technically servers contain no single piece of code or copyrighted material from blizzard (aside maybe the artwork for their website) The clients on the other hand were the ones violating the EULA/whatever. Now assume someone makes a client which would work on emu servers, that client would not use single art piece from WoW , it could we be very crude (heck it could be ascii based 2 text client! ) but you would advertise your server specifically made for it , and ability to play with original wow client would be just a feature you would in no way approve :) Btw they do make some crazy stuff with wow client, check out wow dota: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LJIjZwsdkxo
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Rasix
Moderator
Posts: 15024
I am the harbinger of your doom!
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Go away.
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-Rasix
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tmp
Terracotta Army
Posts: 4257
POW! Right in the Kisser!
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What kind of statutory damages get up to 88 million? No wonder all US cases have crazy settlements.
In a thread elsewhere that was chalked up mostly to the sued guy/gal not bothering to show up in court. Supposedly that results in some very heavy-handed ruling to discourage this sort of behaviour.
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Goreschach
Terracotta Army
Posts: 1546
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The fact that the statutory damages are much, much higher than this ramshackle operation could ever pay is irrelevant. They're set like that because WoW is such a huge moneymaker, and they don't want to give the possibility later down the line of some more well funded group saying "Three million dollars? Lets do this!"
Blizzard doesn't set the statutory damage amount, that is the penalty amount set by law. No shit, captain obvious. I shouldn't really have to explain this, but the law kindof has a vested interest in preventing people from breaking the law.
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« Last Edit: August 17, 2010, 03:42:41 PM by Goreschach »
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Tmon
Terracotta Army
Posts: 1232
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The fact that the statutory damages are much, much higher than this ramshackle operation could ever pay is irrelevant. They're set like that because WoW is such a huge moneymaker, and they don't want to give the possibility later down the line of some more well funded group saying "Three million dollars? Lets do this!"
Blizzard doesn't set the statutory damage amount, that is the penalty amount set by law. No shit, captain obvious. I shouldn't really have to explain this, but the law kindof has a vested interest in preventing people from breaking the law. The sentence, They're set like that because WoW is such a huge moneymaker, and they don't want to give the possibility later down the line of some more well funded group saying "Three million dollars? Lets do this!" ,made your statement read like you believed that the damages were high because WoW was involved. Sorry I misunderstood your oh so obvious point that the fact that wow was involved had no bearing on the amount of punitive damages assessed.
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NiX
Wiki Admin
Posts: 7770
Locomotive Pandamonium
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Calm down.
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Stabs
Terracotta Army
Posts: 796
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I don't really see why there are so many people uncomfortable with the $88m damages.
It was theft. Most forms of theft involve long jail sentences when you get caught. Steal $3m in any other way than online and the repercussions are going to be far more severe than losing your credit cards.
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tazelbain
Terracotta Army
Posts: 6603
tazelbain
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I don't think you should read anything into the damages. Defendant didn't show. The judge basically just gave Blizzard whatever they wanted minus the patently ridiculous stuff.
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"Me am play gods"
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jakonovski
Terracotta Army
Posts: 4388
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I think it's ridiculous by definition really. 88 million never changed hands and nobody will ever pay 88 million damages. So what's the point of the verdict?
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Merusk
Terracotta Army
Posts: 27449
Badge Whore
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The same point as multiple consecutive life sentences on murderers. If things are resolved/ reduced through the appeals process it'll still hurt.
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The past cannot be changed. The future is yet within your power.
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jakonovski
Terracotta Army
Posts: 4388
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The same point as multiple consecutive life sentences on murderers. If things are resolved/ reduced through the appeals process it'll still hurt.
Makes sense, but what a terrible reason. Aren't damages supposed to be based on actual harm done, and not as some arcane vehicle for punishment?
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Lantyssa
Terracotta Army
Posts: 20848
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This is a civil case, not a criminal one. The rules are a bit different.
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Hahahaha! I'm really good at this!
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Surlyboi
Terracotta Army
Posts: 10966
eat a bag of dicks
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I don't really see why there are so many people uncomfortable with the $88m damages.
It was theft. Most forms of theft involve long jail sentences when you get caught. Steal $3m in any other way than online and the repercussions are going to be far more severe than losing your credit cards.
Depends on how you steal that $3m.
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Tuned in, immediately get to watch cringey Ubisoft talking head offering her deepest sympathies to the families impacted by the Orlando shooting while flanked by a man in a giraffe suit and some sort of "horrifically garish neon costumes through the ages" exhibit or something. We need to stop this fucking planet right now and sort some shit out. -Kail
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Numtini
Terracotta Army
Posts: 7675
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I think it's ridiculous by definition really. 88 million never changed hands and nobody will ever pay 88 million damages. So what's the point of the verdict? To scare other people into not doing the same thing. That's what statutory damages are for. Not everyone who is wronged will actually sue, fewer will win. Statutory damages are there to assure that paying real damages doesn't just become a "cost of doing business."
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If you can read this, you're on a board populated by misogynist assholes.
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Stabs
Terracotta Army
Posts: 796
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$88m is not unreasonable.
These clowns created a copy of WoW offering a rival cheaper service. The regular version of WoW makes far more than $88m per year so $88m could be viewed as cheap for running your own commercial WoW service.
The damages were assessed at $200 per player. When I played WoW I bought the box, 2 expansions and subbed for 4 years. Approximately 3*$50 for boxes plus 4 years - 3 free months = 45 *$15 worth of subs. In other words I paid about $825 to play WoW. Paying $200 for each player who played the ripoff instead of the legit version is cheap.
WoW depends upon it's reputation for sales, player retention, and attracting new customers via positive word of mouth. By running a game less well than Blizzard, by giving these "WoW players" less satisfaction Blizzard may lose future sales of all of its products. If people left this freeshard thinking WoW is crap because the customer service never picks up the phone that adversely affects Blizzard's reputation.
Finally the game was basically run as a scam. It sold epics under the guise of allowing players to make donations. These were not really donations at all but cash shop purchases. Selling epics to rich players is always something Blizzard has resisted because it makes for a crap game experience for 95% of the players. That crap game experience may be what players on this freeshard leave thinking WoW is about. Especially since it may not have been obvious to players who weren't interested in the cash shop that they would get schooled unless they "donated".
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