AfreecaTV bans matchfixers' streams - Page 9
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RHoudini
Belgium3626 Posts
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Drakelon91
Singapore4 Posts
On October 23 2015 08:37 RKC wrote: Yes, there is a violation of personal right here - no one is saying there isn't. The only issue is whether it's justified and proportional to protect the greater good of society. On proportionality - how deep is the violation anyway? A person being deprived to stream a particular computer game online? Is it the same as being deprived from livelihood absolutely? Some people make it seem like Korean pro-gamers can only play games as their source of livelihood, and are good at nothing else in life. That, to me, is ridiculous. Are they going to play and live on Starcraft for the rest of their lifetime? No. Now is as good of a start as any for the match-fixers to move on to an entirely different game or try something other than computer games. It's called growing up. How is it a violation of personal rights? I'll use the same argument I've seen from those who were rejoicing when they thought Afreeca wasn't going to listen to Kespa. "It is their service, and it is their right to ban or not ban anyone for any reason" | ||
Joedaddy
United States1948 Posts
Kespa must be the korean e-sports version of the mafia. How do they keep getting their way all the time? edit: added bold text to make it true. | ||
Djzapz
Canada10681 Posts
On October 23 2015 10:42 BreAKerTV wrote: After everything I've seen and learned of in the last week (not just in Korea, but again in my own back yard), I am 100% certain Blizzard only cares about the money and doesn't give a shit about merit. In many ways, it reminds me of what Richard Lewis was talking about when he said, "The good days of eSports will be gone soon." In his interview with Lycan on TLG a few months ago. Richard Lewis is great but the guy's the eternal pessimist. How often has he "threatened" to quit, he just did recently, and a while ago he wrote an article that made a bunch of dumb gamers lose their shit and he said he considered quitting. More recently he was completely shaken by a death threat or something, and said something about how the gaming scene is toxic and he should leave it. Richard Lewis is the embodiment of mood swings, and when he's feeling bad, you'll get doomsday predictions from him. eSports are very clearly trending up with games like LoL (sigh) and CSGO reaching levels never seen before, and Blizzard missed the train. | ||
mishimaBeef
Canada2259 Posts
who else would disqualify a player for typing "pp" instead of "ppp" before pausing... | ||
BreAKerTV
Taiwan1656 Posts
On October 23 2015 11:19 Djzapz wrote: There's another part I left out. He said the direction of where eSports is going, like big org who are in charge of tournaments are going to start charging for premium content.Richard Lewis is great but the guy's the eternal pessimist. How often has he "threatened" to quit, he just did recently, and a while ago he wrote an article that made a bunch of dumb gamers lose their shit and he said he considered quitting. More recently he was completely shaken by a death threat or something, and said something about how the gaming scene is toxic and he should leave it. Richard Lewis is the embodiment of mood swings, and when he's feeling bad, you'll get doomsday predictions from him. eSports are very clearly trending up with games like LoL (sigh) and CSGO reaching levels never seen before, and Blizzard missed the train. What I'm telling you now is that they are starting to charge for premium content before it is even created with what I heard the other day. | ||
-Celestial-
United Kingdom3867 Posts
On October 23 2015 07:21 nimdil wrote: Second, that's not fair comparison. Yes it absolutely is. Both organisations are high-profile businesses that have the responsibility of hosting incredibly prestigious tournaments for a specific discipline (SC2 and cycling in these cases). People who have undermined the integrity of the competition have been banned from said tournaments. One of these two was prepared to willingly allow said people to continue plying the trade in the discipline after being caught. And, indeed, with the potential to profit off it through them. I argue that this is patently ridiculous and completely inappropriate both morally and from the perspective of a healthy scene for the competition in question. Seems like a perfectly good analogy to me. On October 23 2015 10:28 pure.Wasted wrote: What is useful? Answering the question "should the company that owns GSL actively promote the content of SC2 cheaters, hackers, and match fixers?" Curiously, I haven't seen a single person saying "yeah, there's nothing wrong with that." I'd like to see some people actually start saying that before posting from now on to be honest. None of this slippery slope nonsense like "should they be banned from buying broccoli then?!?!?". A simple statement that they find no problem with cheaters being actively promoted alongside the GSL. | ||
ShambhalaWar
United States930 Posts
On October 23 2015 10:28 pure.Wasted wrote: Lifetime ban from... what? I posed this question in the other thread and never received a response. B4 never match-fixed in individual leagues. So... should he only be banned from team leagues? B4 and Yoda never match-fixed outside of Korea. Should they only be banned from Korean events, and not from WCS EU/NA? B4 and Yoda only match-fixed in events that grant WCS points. Should they be allowed to participate in major tournaments? Minor tournaments? Weekly tournaments like Olimoleague? How about streams of LotV's daily tournaments? Any one of those can be match fixed. Any one of those can be cheated in in some other way. Whenever someone brings up ethics or morality, I wonder if they understand that the line must be drawn somewhere, and no matter where you draw it, that decision will always be arbitrary. There is no ethically "correct" solution. Some people believe that the justice system exists to punish criminals, other people believe that the justice system exists to rehabilitate criminals. That alone should tell you that we'll never get anywhere useful by prioritizing minute ethical distinctions, when there are other very important considerations on the table. We might as well argue should a criminal receive 9 years in prison, or 10, or 11? What is useful? Answering the question "should the company that owns GSL actively promote the content of SC2 cheaters, hackers, and match fixers?" Curiously, I haven't seen a single person saying "yeah, there's nothing wrong with that." The received a lifetime ban from competitive play, and jail time. I assume sentencing will happen eventually, keep in mind the ban occurred before anyone was actually convicted, I think that's also pretty fucked up. My comment was that the justice system in Korea will punish them, kespa taking away streaming rights is in excess of the punishment of lifetime ban from competition. Like banning the bw streamer now, I think its uncalled for. On a side note, the department of "corrections" is a misnomer. There is nothing corrective about it, it's purely punishment (that is changing in a small way). Jail traumatizes everyone involved and therefore increases their chance of committing more crimes upon release. But we do have punishments for crime and hopefully we can agree some are excessive. I've state my point plenty on this subject, ima try and step away now lol. See if I have the strength. | ||
RKC
2847 Posts
On October 23 2015 10:44 Drakelon91 wrote: How is it a violation of personal rights? I'll use the same argument I've seen from those who were rejoicing when they thought Afreeca wasn't going to listen to Kespa. "It is their service, and it is their right to ban or not ban anyone for any reason" I don't mean 'personal right' as in 'fundamental right', of course. I'm just saying that for a private enterprise which offers public or quasi-public service i.e. a service that is available to the public at large (e.g. booking an airline ticket, uploading videos on Youtube, signing up for Facebook), an individual usually feels a sense of legitimate entitlement and expectation to use the service freely and the private enterprise would want individuals to feel that way too. It is wholly within the right of such private enterprises to ban anyone without reason, of course - but they usually set down policies and rules, and are expected to follow them out of commercial good sense, if not ethics. I'm just saying that the issue is whether Afreeca, a private enterprise, was justified and acting proportionally in banning match-fixers to stream Starcraft to protect the greater good of the StarCraft professional gaming community. This is not a constitutional or fundamental liberties debate (although there may be some room to make it one, as in governments should not allow private enterprise to blatantly discriminate people - e.g. ultra-Conservative bakers in US refusing to serve gay couples - but let's not go there). | ||
ShambhalaWar
United States930 Posts
On October 23 2015 10:44 RHoudini wrote: Putting things in bold does not make them any more true. LOL, I'm pretty sure people do that to make the words stand out | ||
RKC
2847 Posts
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Doodsmack
United States7224 Posts
Thanks | ||
pure.Wasted
Canada4701 Posts
On October 23 2015 12:56 Doodsmack wrote: So basically South Koreans take their discipline and sense of honor and morality to extreme levels, and Afreeca caved to that. Remind me never to move to South Korea. Thanks Did you know that if you commit a felony in the US, you can never ever become a police officer? Did you know that if a US soldier is dishonorably discharged, s/he can never ever work as a government employee in any capacity? Just a friendly reminder that you may need to move out of the United States. edit: to be perfectly clear, I'm not bashing America, I'm bashing your shoddy nationalistic "argument." | ||
Heyoka
Katowice25012 Posts
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{ToT}ColmA
Japan3260 Posts
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BreAKerTV
Taiwan1656 Posts
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Alucen-Will-
United States4054 Posts
On October 23 2015 12:23 RKC wrote: I don't mean 'personal right' as in 'fundamental right', of course. I'm just saying that for a private enterprise which offers public or quasi-public service i.e. a service that is available to the public at large (e.g. booking an airline ticket, uploading videos on Youtube, signing up for Facebook), an individual usually feels a sense of legitimate entitlement and expectation to use the service freely and the private enterprise would want individuals to feel that way too. It is wholly within the right of such private enterprises to ban anyone without reason, of course - but they usually set down policies and rules, and are expected to follow them out of commercial good sense, if not ethics. I'm just saying that the issue is whether Afreeca, a private enterprise, was justified and acting proportionally in banning match-fixers to stream Starcraft to protect the greater good of the StarCraft professional gaming community. This is not a constitutional or fundamental liberties debate (although there may be some room to make it one, as in governments should not allow private enterprise to blatantly discriminate people - e.g. ultra-Conservative bakers in US refusing to serve gay couples - but let's not go there). This is pretty much the case, yes. I don't see it personally as a big bone to pick with Afreeca as an organization; it's understandable that as an organization you wouldn't want to be associate with match fixing, particularly those using your platform for revenue or promotion in the general sense. Granted of course, it should go no further than this and the legal penalties they pay. I think the notion that the individuals should be banned by blizzard in playing the game is absurd | ||
StarStruck
25339 Posts
On October 23 2015 11:09 Joedaddy wrote: what the heck? Kespa must be the korean e-sports version of the mafia. How do they keep getting their way all the time? edit: added bold text to make it true. misconceptions. | ||
Circumstance
United States11403 Posts
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Incognoto
France10239 Posts
However if in Korea the backlash is there towards the community, then it makes sense that they would revert their decision. Good decision. Don't match-fix. Really, leave the scene and go do something else, at this point. Edit: that said, maybe it would have been better to give a fixed sentence instead of a life-time ban? | ||
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