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Thread Statistics | Show CCP posts - 26 post(s) |

Barbara Nichole
Cryogenic Consultancy Black Sun Alliance
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Posted - 2011.06.01 00:20:00 -
[1]
Edited by: Barbara Nichole on 01/06/2011 00:26:31
This has been a very interesting thread. Thanks to Ninja for his tireless work bringing it to us.
For months I've been tracking a huge group of mission botters flying through my system day and night, hundreds of them with the same naming and corp naming scheme. I have screen shots of them, all their names and corps. Clearly they were all part of the same group even though they were all in their own corp of one. I figured that the new botting protocal for some reason ignored them.
I was just getting ready to finally report them this week when they are all gone for the first time in months. Could it be that CCP took action against mission botting finally? I'd like to think so. I'm crossing my finers that they are gone but today is patch day..maybe they are just slow getting up and running.
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Barbara Nichole
Cryogenic Consultancy Black Sun Alliance
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Posted - 2011.06.03 01:06:00 -
[2]
Edited by: Barbara Nichole on 03/06/2011 01:12:15
Originally by: Ranger 1
Originally by: NOVA-STAR Interrupting this thread. This is real I did laugh abit, then I heard the part about their punishment of they failed to farm ISK..
Gold-Farming in a Chinese forced-labor camp The Guardian reports that prisoners in a Chinese forced-labor camp were required to "gold-farm" in multiplayer games such as World of Warcraft, EVE:Online, Farmville, amassing credits and virtual objects that the guards could sell to other players for real currency.
"Prison bosses made more money forcing inmates to play games than they do forcing people to do manual labour," Liu told the Guardian. "There were 300 prisoners forced to play games. We worked 12-hour shifts in the camp. I heard them say they could earn 5,000-6,000rmb [ú470-570] a day. We didn't see any of the money. The computers were never turned off."
But it was the forced online gaming that was the most surreal part of his imprisonment. The hard slog may have been virtual, but the punishment for falling behind was real.
"If I couldn't complete my work quota, they would punish me physically. They would make me stand with my hands raised in the air and after I returned to my dormitory they would beat me with plastic pipes. We kept playing until we could barely see things," he said.
Kieser Report, RT - Commenting on the Article Above Stacy Herbert: They force these Chinese prisoners to play multiplayer games amassing credits and virtual objects, and forcing the prisoners to hand over the virtual items for real cash.
All the more reason to disable their ability to use our game as a means to this end.
@ ISquishWorms: "As you said in the article this is old news and yet nothing has been done about it years on and that is my concern."
What on earth has led you to this conclusion? EVEs security protocols have not, and will not ever, be discussed with the general public. Any instances that have come to light of the EVE code being tampered with have been caught and dealt with. That is the reality of it, all else is supposition inserted in place of fact. Next thing you know you are going to find yourself refusing to do bank transactions or online purchases due to unfounded paranoia. Yes, occasionally security protocols fail and credit card information is exposed. It is more likely that you will be mugged in an alley or your house will be broken into and your credit card physically stolen. Shall we resort to the barter system until all possible risk is eliminated? (Even then, someone would likely steal your Ox while you slept). 
Just a quick note, CCP's action against botters does not stop real people from working hard under forced labor conditions to farm isk... also, chinese have their own server.. so they aren't here on tranquility right?
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Barbara Nichole
Cryogenic Consultancy Black Sun Alliance
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Posted - 2011.06.09 08:27:00 -
[3]
Originally by: Super Whopper
Also there's a difference between RMT and bot. Bots usually do it to pay for PLEX, RMT are the real evil ones. They are the ones who run sweatshops, labour camps and other forms of slavery. They are also the ones who really hurt the game through the trade of super caps, moon crap and other things.
Hogwash! There is no difference. Both RMT and botting for plex ruin the economy; both RMT and botting for plex are against the EULA.
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Barbara Nichole
Cryogenic Consultancy Black Sun Alliance
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Posted - 2011.06.16 22:46:00 -
[4]
Quote: Eve without botters will only make the tech moon superblocks even stronger. I for one welcome this ill conceived idea to hunt down botters.
You can't balance the game based on a massive breach of the EULA. Botters need to be stopped..and this may be an never ending fight, but that doesn't meen we should not fight it.
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Barbara Nichole
Cryogenic Consultancy Black Sun Alliance
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Posted - 2011.07.18 19:22:00 -
[5]
I've noticed the mission botters have started to come back.. better organized and more careful than before... but still in huge numbers.
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Barbara Nichole
Cryogenic Consultancy Black Sun Alliance
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Posted - 2011.07.18 19:24:00 -
[6]
Originally by: Jonathan Ferguson
Originally by: Neftaran As for making ones 'work meaningless' If I mine an hour and a bot mines an hour I feel in no way that my hour of mining is "meaningless" because of his/her actions. Is some how the ore I mined less useful? No. What about the conversations I have with other players while I'm mining have those been devalued because some other player in the system is botting? No. The items I manufacture have they been affected because I was mining by hand and someone else was not? No.
C'mon now, if you're going to troll, you've got to make it so that at least 5% of the population is dumb enough to believe what you're saying. But for the 5% (who knows, some of the Lost in EVE guys might be reading,) I'd better spell it out.
If I play EVE and make 20M ISK/hr mining and someone else AFK's EVE and makes 500M ISK/hr botting on multiple accounts 23/7, of course that devalues my effort.
The same thing could be said of someone who mines longer and better than you wihtout botting...
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