Pixelatorx2
Platinum
- Joined
- Oct 2, 2012
- Messages
- 2,957
- Reaction score
- 2,625
Continuing on.- Warning may contain harsh opinions -
While I believe this rule is bunk, and should be completely rethought, comparing it to a real life murder is literally taking it too far. Someone being removed from a game for a week is nothing, absolutely nothing like losing a real person. When someone is murdered, what comes of it? Human distress for years, if not forever. When someone is banned, you say "eh" and suck it up and move onto one of the other thousand servers. Unless you can compare both, do not compare it. You have no idea the pain that people go through. If you can, don't make that analogy anyway - you clearly don't get it.
Is the rule unfair to the reported player?
No, not really. Unless the ban is recent, and only happened a couple of weeks ago, then I believe the player who deleted the evidence deserves some sort of punishment. Is it 7 month old evidence, and the banned player has made no login-attempts, then no, the player who deleted the evidence is completely within the rules to do so. The banned player should then not be able to dispute their ban.
What I wonder, is why that both sides of this argument cannot agree on something. Setting a time limit, say 3 months, for the banned player to dispute their ban is reasonable. Why you ask? After three months of unsuccessful ban disputes, and or, no ban disputes whatsoever and have made no login attempts (this can be recorded) then they clearly aren't interested in coming back. Its like parole in a prison/jail (You insisted on comparing the two..)
EDIT: Gotta sleep, will edit this tomorrow
Pixelatorx2 tagging myself to remind myself.
What I personally don't agree with is the fact that when the hacker has hacked and was banned for 7 days, then the evidence was deleted and BAM. The reporter is permanently banned. Forever. Gone. Over just a 7day ban. Wasteful, and will just cause further arguments. If you give the banned player a time limit to dispute their ban however, the evidence would/can be deleted after the set time limit. Better yet, get a database that stores the videos for 3 months (or however many you think the time limit should be) and then the video is deleted.
Perfect. Fool proof system to prevent this situation at all. If the reporter deletes the evidence off of his/her channel there would be no reason to delete the evidence. Sure, you say, "The database wont have enough". Think. Every day, the database would delete the same amount that come in. (+ 10gb of data, -10gb of data) leaving the amount of storage the same. During a clean sweep, sure the database will fill up even more (say, +20gb of data) but them remember, after 30 days (or however many you want it to be) that gets deleted (-20gb of data) leaving the same amount of space. To save even more space, limit the hacker video to under 5 minutes. If the player reports using their entire video, get a mod to trim it down to the part with the player. Not very difficult, any windows computer can do that with Windows Movie Maker.
Moo brought up a good point:
Hopefully this comes to some resolve, bbl.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.