EA Makes Nice With Banned Players
[img_inline src="http://cdn.themis-media.com/media/global/images/library/deriv/73/73931.jpg"]
New policy takes some of the weight out of being banned.
In an surprising move, Electronic Arts has revised its account suspension policy [http://help.ea.com/article/electronic-arts-account-suspension-policy] to allow banned Origin users access to their games, albeit in a limited form. The new policy allows users with a disabled Origin account to access the single player or offline modes of any of their previously purchased titles.
EA enacted the policy just over a month ago, although it didn't really bring the new changes to anyone's attention until recently. The new changes mark a strong shift away from the rather harsh penalties EA used to favor when Origin first launched. Previously, when EA banned a user, they lost complete access to their accounts for a 72-hour period, and repeat offenders were likely to have their accounts permanently deleted, including any and all paid content.
While this may be a good, reasonable step towards better customer service, EA probably has a long way to go to work off the stigma of being crowned collects user data [http://www.escapistmagazine.com/news/view/116653-EA-Wins-Title-of-Worst-Company-in-America] without asking first.
Source: CinemaBlend [http://www.cinemablend.com/games/EA-Updates-Origin-Account-Policy-You-Can-Now-Access-Your-Games-Banned-41417.html]
Permalink
[img_inline src="http://cdn.themis-media.com/media/global/images/library/deriv/73/73931.jpg"]
New policy takes some of the weight out of being banned.
In an surprising move, Electronic Arts has revised its account suspension policy [http://help.ea.com/article/electronic-arts-account-suspension-policy] to allow banned Origin users access to their games, albeit in a limited form. The new policy allows users with a disabled Origin account to access the single player or offline modes of any of their previously purchased titles.
EA enacted the policy just over a month ago, although it didn't really bring the new changes to anyone's attention until recently. The new changes mark a strong shift away from the rather harsh penalties EA used to favor when Origin first launched. Previously, when EA banned a user, they lost complete access to their accounts for a 72-hour period, and repeat offenders were likely to have their accounts permanently deleted, including any and all paid content.
While this may be a good, reasonable step towards better customer service, EA probably has a long way to go to work off the stigma of being crowned collects user data [http://www.escapistmagazine.com/news/view/116653-EA-Wins-Title-of-Worst-Company-in-America] without asking first.
Source: CinemaBlend [http://www.cinemablend.com/games/EA-Updates-Origin-Account-Policy-You-Can-Now-Access-Your-Games-Banned-41417.html]
Permalink