SAOtaku
Diamond
- Joined
- May 7, 2013
- Messages
- 74
- Reaction score
- 14
The problem is not that we want this rule changed because some people were banned because they did not know of the rule, but because the rule is just stupid. A player who is trying to help the community vs. hacker and the player trying to help the community gets permanently banned. Dat logic doe. I understand why it is a rule, but the consequences are way too harsh imo. Not everyone is deleting the evidence with the purpose of defying the rules. Who the heck would report their friend in the first place and then delete the evidence so he gets unbanned? Yeah, no one really. And as stated before, sometimes when evidence is deleted it's not necessarily their fault. They could have been flagged or YouTube just has it's issues one day.We aren't changing the rules because of people not reading them; that's like saying if I murdered someone, I shouldn't be punished because I didn't know it was illegal/wrong to kill people.
(If you want a less obvious example, it's like saying I can get away with jaywalking in Seattle because I didn't know it was illegal.)
Some people are YouTubers who look at their video manager and can see all the videos. Looking at the amount of hacker reports when they're trying to find their actual videos is a pain. So, to make it more neat and tidy, they delete videos they don't need, which means the reports that have already been dealt with from ages ago.In my personal opinion, the permanent ban for removing evidence is completely fair and well-deserved for people who do remove evidence. It's not like you have to pay for each video that you have on your YouTube account.
If the rule must stay, there are other solutions to make peace with the angry cscoop fanboys and whatnot.
1. I like this one the best. State a minimum amount of time in which the reporting player must keep the evidence and a maximum that the reported person has to dispute their ban. After the time is passed, the reporting player can delete the evidence and the reported player can no longer dispute it.
2. Treat it like hacking; first offense is a 7 day ban, next time is permanent. If the hackers get a 2nd chance, why can't someone who just deleted a video get one?
3. Sean's idea
If nothing changes, what if a Youtuber uploads an SG where he kills a hacker in it and one of his fans or the Youtuber himself reports the hacker and later that video is removed. The hacker tries to dispute his ban. Does the Youtuber, who could have been trying to protect the hacker, get banned because of deleted evidence? If not, then why? :3
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