Fair enough, surprising I got so many responses since the article doesn't seem to mention a Tribunal or anything of the sort. I was posting entirely based on how I read the article which focused on complaint %s and assuming it worked similar to other automated systems.Missing SHODAN said:It isn't automated at all - those reports were all reviewed by the community through the Tribunal, which is a community driven paid jurist system, basically. The community reviewers get the full chatlog from the game, the reasons players reported the defendant/asshole/whatever, and their stats in the game (ie their K/A/D, item build, etc), and decide whether or not the defendant/asshole crossed the line with their behavior. These reports are shown to some number of players to get a consensus and then the guilty/pardon results are reported back to Riot.Therumancer said:On one hand this is good, on the other hand this is done entirely by an automated system apparently. The justification for these guys getting banned is based on the percentage of complaints/reports filed rather than specific incidents and things they did.
My Tribunal history is full of time bans. (~500 cases)A Smooth Criminal said:It's quite pathetic really... Bans in League are not handed out enough considering how vile the community is...
Why shouldnt i be proud of contributing to make the game a bit better? Heck, even the most cases i skip, because i am not sure, if guilty or not, are voted timeban by a vast majority. (Afaik is the next ban after three timebans a perma anyway)A Smooth Criminal said:I think that if after 500 reports a player still hasn't reformed, they're really just bringing the rest of the community down.
I'm not a fan of Buckley, but this comic sums up why that won't happen. To quote Scott Pilgrim, "everyone is bitches".DVS BSTrD said:* Insert additional generic comment asking why they didn't ban the rest of the LoL player base*
See, if an average internet user like you thought of that, what makes you think that not a single person at Riot could do the same?BiH-Kira said:You get reported in LoL for saying "gg" at the end of the match if you dominated the game.
Anyone who thinks that the amount of reports in LoL shows anything is delusional.
I know I'm not the expert that you are, but I seriously doubt having six times more reports than everyone else, and being banned for them, means they were still all false ones.Tribunal case evidence includes report reasons and comments, in-game chat log, per player stats and inventory, date, time, map, and mode for each individual game from which the case is built.
These cases are presented to random community members who use the Tribunal who then review the case files and render a judgment - pardon or punish. Player Support then uses this information to help assign the right penalties to the right players.
TheKasp said:Yeah, well deserved ban. If you are a 'professional' then behave that way, dimwit.
People include text in a report and the system only highlights reports which are then sent an admin who looks at the reports and the information recorded from the game, if he deems it a violation it is sent to a player tribunal for judgement, if they judge it a breach then it is once again sent to the admins for a final decision on the punishment (severity of the punishment and the such).Therumancer said:I have mixed opinions.
On one hand this is good, on the other hand this is done entirely by an automated system apparently. The justification for these guys getting banned is based on the percentage of complaints/reports filed rather than specific incidents and things they did.
The problem with automated systems is that they are easily abused, we've already had plenty of horror stories about people being locked out of their accounts due to automated systems, after having done very little. I myself had a problem (albiet one that never went that far) when I noticed my Gamer Rep on XBL dropping playing online fighting games because half the time I'd beat someone they would report me for unsportsmanlike conduct or something else, a routine behavior with a lot of that community. I wound up stopping playing fighting games over XBL as a result.
See, in a case like this when it comes to dominant players you have to ask, how many people were complaining because they actually did something, or because they just didn't like the player or losing to them.
To me, I'd rather hear that someone working for the company descended with the mighty banhammer after personally catching them saying "X, X, and Y" to other players, than hearing "oh well, the guy had complaints in 29% of his matches" which from my own experience could just be people throwing tantrums similar to what I've run into (and I'm not even good at fighting games, god forbid what it's like for some of the pros in MOBA games and such).
The way this sounds, unless they present some actual proof, I'd actually be considering a lawsuit if it was costing me money via tournament participation, and accuse the company of trying to load the tourney.
In a more general sense, when I briefly returned to WoW to try "Pandas" (which was meh) I had to go through an act of congress to re-activate my account due to Blizzard's automated system having shut it down for cheating... when it was an inactive account (and was intact as far as I could tell when I actually got in). I've also been threatened by automated systems detecting improper behavior with other online games I wasn't even playing or didn't even have installed (and even re-installed them to check it out and found nada).
In short, I put absolutly no faith in any kind of automated "recognition" software, and even less faith in any kind of impersonal system by which one player can "report" another for any reason and have it go into some kind of meaningful record without human involvement. IMO these companies need to actually hire some bloody people, and stop trying to cut corners by automating everything. Especially Blizzard... really, there is no excuse for some of the crap I've gotten from them (always bureaucratic stuff, not user complaints). "Your account has been locked out due to improper behavior" Rly? My account that hasn't been on for 2 years was trying to sell gold? The one that has all of it's gold and items intact? I've been detected trying to sell my Diablo 3 account, the one with my mighty Level 17 Wizard (since I wound up not caring much for the game)... I'm sure people were lining up by the thousands for that one.
So it's better because the same kind people who report for no reason are also judging?Phlakes said:See, if an average internet user like you thought of that, what makes you think that not a single person at Riot could do the same?BiH-Kira said:You get reported in LoL for saying "gg" at the end of the match if you dominated the game.
Anyone who thinks that the amount of reports in LoL shows anything is delusional.
I mean, after thirty seconds of looking around-
I know I'm not the expert that you are, but I seriously doubt having six times more reports than everyone else, and being banned for them, means they were still all false ones.Tribunal case evidence includes report reasons and comments, in-game chat log, per player stats and inventory, date, time, map, and mode for each individual game from which the case is built.
These cases are presented to random community members who use the Tribunal who then review the case files and render a judgment - pardon or punish. Player Support then uses this information to help assign the right penalties to the right players.
If you want to act like you know better than them, at least make it a little bit reasonable.
Tenmar said:Except the problem here is that as a person doing tribunal you are essentially having evidence and context completely withheld to actually form a proper and reasonable judgment. A simple text log to read is easily misunderstood due to a person's lack of reading comprehension. Then add to the text log that you have no video evidence that goes with the scenario as to understand why said player was reported. Okay sure, the guy told another guy "fuck you" but if 18 minutes have passed and that fuck you comes out of the blue you would have to be quite dense to not ask the why did he suddenly violate "the summoner's code".sapphireofthesea said:People include text in a report and the system only highlights reports which are then sent an admin who looks at the reports and the information recorded from the game, if he deems it a violation it is sent to a player tribunal for judgement, if they judge it a breach then it is once again sent to the admins for a final decision on the punishment (severity of the punishment and the such).
It is likely the ban for these guys followed the same or similar path. Hope this clears up any concerns.
The ability to have a proper testimony and video evidence when the games are always recorded should be able to be watched to actually understand the context. Because that guy could of been griefing by constantly roaming on purpose and that is provoking a person. Riot has all the tools to actually empower players to really see what is going on in each match and really ask themselves "would I do that in the same situation" but won't let players view what really matters which is context.