So, allow me to get this straight.
Even if the evidence was for a 24-hour ban, the person who deleted the evidence could get permanently removed from MCG?
Okay, yeah. Sounds completely fair. Woohoo.
First off, this is my take on the rule:
No.
No.
No.
Obviously, there's been a few dozen good arguments against this rule already, both on and off this thread, so I won't go over those again in detail, but just to recap:
- What about accidental deletions? ex: say there was a Google+ account that was linked to a YouTube account, and the Google+ account got deleted, thus indirectly deleting the YT account and all videos on it... including the hacker report(s).
- The option where people have the chance to re-upload the evidence is completely absurd, and even staff members know it. Do you really think that we're going to save all of the hacker reports we've ever made on our own storage space? Personally, my laptop has less than 300 GBs of storage, and it already has 50 GBs of software and other miscellaneous files, and a good 100 GBs of business files. For an international company. Worth real money. Do you really think I'm going to move aside and delete those files just so that I can have a few dozen videos that take up the rest of my storage, and then not even be able to download a 10GB Steam game? No thank you.
- Rather than comparing it to murder, let's say... bullying or general abuse. It's not as extreme, but still a comparison. A bystander takes a video and gets the bully suspended for 7 days. Half a year later, after the evidence was deleted to save storage, the bully wants the suspension off of his school record, so he appeals to the school administration. There's no evidence any more, but the suspension was still there. Does he get the suspension lifted? No. Does the bystander get expelled? Of course NOT!
However, there
are still potential cases in which the person deletes the evidence on purpose. Very few, but they're there.
So rather than just raising my hand and shouting "REMOVE THE RULE!!1!!!!!!!1", I'd like to propose something else.
Ordinarily, the report
er would get permanently banned, and the rule-breaker would get the ban wiped off his or her record due to lack of evidence.
However, what if the reporter got a 7-day tempban, and the ban was kept in place for the rule-breaker.
A permanent ban is extremely severe, and in some cases
much too severe, particularly in the cases in which it was an accident.
A 7-day ban is a clear message saying 'Don't do it again', but eventually they will be able to return to the servers that they originally tried to help by reporting the user.
The rule-breaker, however, keeps their ban even if it is disputed.
Yes, this would mean a change in policy, but it's not a particularly bad one.
Think about it - If the ban is temporary, it'll be lifted again and the user will be able to play after a few days/weeks, and even after a year they'll be able to apply for Mod.
If it's permanent, odds are they did something
really bad, or a second/third offense. If it's that severe, obviously the evidence was clearly sufficient to warrant a permanent ban, so why not just keep it in place even if the evidence is gone?
A secondary option to the permanent ban side of the suggestion for upholding bans despite a lack of evidence:
Rather than a permanent ban, because there's no evidence, shorten it to a month. They'll be able to come back onto the servers after just over four weeks, which is more severe than a 7-day ban, but still a large compromise to the existing permanent ban despite a lack of evidence.
Whether you accept my suggestions, tweak them, or just say to yourself, "Mooclan, what on Earth were you thinking?!?!?"....
Just please realize that this is something that I really think should be changed. It doesn't even have to be completely removed, just changed to make it less harsh.
Video games are supposed to be fun for players. Being banned off of one of your favorite servers for a crazy reason that more than half of the community doesn't even know about really isn't fun, just sayin'.