Blizzard Busts 320,000 in Battle.net Ban

Andy Chalk

One Flag, One Fleet, One Cat
Nov 12, 2002
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Blizzard Busts 320,000 in Battle.net Ban


If you've found yourself suddenly unable to play Diablo 2 or Warcraft 3 on Battle.net [http://www.battle.net], you may may one of the 320,000 users Blizzard has smacked in the face with the banhammer.

One thing you have to say about Blizzard [http://www.blizzard.com/]: When they do things, they do them big. MMOGs. Cinematic cut scenes. Publicity campaigns for new games. And bans. Hell, this isn't even a "ban," it's a massacre, a sweeping, Stalinesque purge of the ranks of Battle.net users caught violating the Terms of Use in one way or another. And, much like those Soviet-era liquidations, there's little hope for anyone caught in the net: Those sent to the Gulag on their first offense will be reintegrated into society after 30 days, while repeat offenders are gone for good.

"We would like all players to remember that abuse of unintended mechanics and/or use of third party programs is a violation of the agreement made when signing on to Battle.net, and can subject your account to disciplinary action up to and including a permanent ban of its access to the service," Blizzard Community Manager Micah "Bashiok" Whipple wrote in the Diablo 2 forum [http://forums.battle.net/thread.html?topicId=24401612571&sid=3000]. "These types of activities can severely impact the stability of our servers, and we'll continue to aggressively monitor Battle.net in order to protect the service and its players from the harmful effects of cheating."

Many of the bans were made as the result of tip-offs from "legitimate" Battle.net users and Bashiok encouraged everyone to continue informing on their neighbors. "If you come across a hack, find a site responsible for distributing hacks, or have a replay of a newly available hack, please report this to our hacks team at [email protected] or through our Hacks Report Form," he added.

This isn't the first time Blizzard has lowered the boom on its users: In November 2008 the studio laid the smack down [http://www.escapistmagazine.com/news/view/87392-Blizzard-Cracks-Down-With-Battle-net-Ban] on more than 350,000 Diablo 2 and Starcraft users who were caught using third-party hacks on Battle.net. Apparently, some people just don't learn.


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Bloodeye

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Aug 25, 2009
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Bloody hell. That's some rather epic banning there. That hammer must be massive.
 

Danpascooch

Zombie Specialist
Apr 16, 2009
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Funny coincidence, my World of Warcraft account was compromised by a keylogger yesterday.......wait, that's not funny, it's devastating.

Especially since it means they might have access to my Escapist, my Ebay, and (shit shit shit shit) my Paypal
 

Abedeus

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Sep 14, 2008
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And the hordes of idiots shouting "BLIZZURD DOSN'T CAER!!!" fell silent. Because they couldn't log in.

Thank God I didn't give in to temptation.
 

Danny Ocean

Master Archivist
Jun 28, 2008
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danpascooch said:
Especially since it means they might have access to my Escapist, my Ebay, and (shit shit shit shit) my Paypal
Change your E-mail passwords first, then all the others. Have fun!
 

HK_01

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Jun 1, 2009
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I wonder if that includes bots for hosting and banlists and such. I don't use it myself but those kinds of things seem to be alright to me.
 

chaos order

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Jan 27, 2010
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Nuclear missile detected anyone? holy crap they banned alot of people fortunately i nvr cheat in online games i see no point
 

CuddlyCombine

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Sep 12, 2007
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The bad part about this is that they're sweeping everything, not just the bad stuff. I've had to stop using a third-party program whose sole purpose is to reconnect the user after they've lost connection; in other words, it's an unofficial patch for Blizzard's 10-year-old multiplayer code. It can't do anything else. Yet, they'll ban you for using it.

I understand where they're coming from, but maybe they should update those ToS or something. This makes them look plain stupid.
 

bjj hero

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Feb 4, 2009
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psrdirector said:
Nimzar said:
Andy Chalk said:
Many of the bans were made as the result of tip-offs from "legitimate" Battle.net users and Bashiok encouraged everyone to continue informing on their neighbors. "If you come across a hack, find a site responsible for distributing hacks, or have a replay of a newly available hack, please report this to our hacks team at [email protected] or through our Hacks Report Form," he added.
Umm... just FYI a system like this was once implemented in East Germany.
Its also used to find and capture child molesters
And communists in America... and potential school/workplace shooters. The Yanks love a good informant. Look at how they all love Huggy Bear.

I love seeing use of the ban hammer. Those who complain its being used too harshly are normally in denial. Look at the pro video on MW2.
 

Sosa Star

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Nov 23, 2009
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I read this, moved to another article but caught myself humming "It's hammer time", so I came back to share.

Good for Blizzard, I dislike Mods myself, and when playing with other people, using them just makes the playing field uneven and then people don't want to play. I'll use cheats when playing a single player game at times but I will never use anything that would give me an edge over others cause it's nolonger fun for me.

But that's just my two cents

*goes back to whistling the Hammer song*
 

Tiny116

The Cheerful Pessimist
May 6, 2009
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Bloodeye said:
Bloody hell. That's some rather epic banning there. That hammer must be massive.
No not massive,
They just have the hammer of THOR
OT: Mind you if your gunna cheat you can't complain
 

bjj hero

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Feb 4, 2009
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psrdirector said:
:p i was more mentioning that informing on people for some sort of authority can also be done for good, and not just evil :p
You don't have to tell me. I'd dob my next door neighbor in as a Montenegrin War Criminal for a Pot noodle and a packet of Monster munch.