Banned From WoW For WINE & Programmable Keyboard
An anonymous reader writes "Player gets banned for playing World of Warcraft under WINE and using a Logitech Gaming keyboard. "I am an experienced network engineer for an ISP and I am often running World of Warcraft on Linux through the use of WINE..."" Although the e-mails exchanged are unclear
my guess is that the programmable keyboard was more the problem then WINE. Not that you'd ever know that given that Blizzard communicates with their users seemingly almost exclusively with form letters.
Source:w ow-interface-customization&t=330798&tmp=1#post3307 98
http://forums.worldofwarcraft.com/thread.aspx?fn=
It seems like it was definitely the programmable keyboard and not WINE that set off their bot detectors.
... why didn't they just message him when they saw the odd behavior? Or do something else to verify it's a human on the other end?)
Apparently the macros on the keyboard were making him do repeated actions, and somehow this was interpreted by Blizzard as "unattended" operation. (Why they think it was unattended I don't know, TFA doesn't say exactly
Anyway, a quote from TFA:
"So it seems that if I use a programmable keyboard I am botting. However I suspect their 3rd party detection software saw a very strange enviroinment in which WoW was running; that combined with the repetitive task of healing myself, switching weapons, and casting Hex of Weakness programmed in my keyboard, I am viewed as a bot."
So it seems other people using WoW under WINE are safe, you'd just better not get too trigger-happy with the keyboard macros.
What's really the problem here is that there seems to be a huge disconnect between official Blizzard policy (programmable keyboards are okay, this has been explicitly said by one of their reps in the forums, according to the article) and what the GMs did. And after the guy got banned, they seem to just be just stonewalling him and hoping he'll go away, giving him a lot of "the matter is closed" crap. I have to salute his perserverence, though, in spite of this.
Rather a disappointing showing from Blizzard.
"Ladies and gentlemen, my killbot features Lotus Notes and a machine gun. It is the finest available."
On this point (botting) the EULA has been clear since the release of the game. If one knows something he is doing could be percieved as botting (at the discretion of the owner of the content) then why tempt fate by using it and then admit to using it?
They made a judegement call with their corporate reputation as the foundation upon which they stood to defend this principle. That didn't leave them any backing-down room. When you admitted to the programmable keyboard that gave them what they needed to completely defend their position.
Step 1: ditch programmable keyboard.
Step 2: obtain new credit card.
Step 3: Hellooooo Level 1.
good luck - EULAs can be tough.
Cogito Ergo Sum
Karma...getting...low... Need..to..get..back..over...Positive!
When you a grinding, if a GM suspects botting they will whisper you looking for you to respond. If you don't respond within a reasonable amount of time you get nailed for botting.
Yawn..
Before you all come down on him with the "OMGFTW He gotz banned for the WINE iN lInux0rz" it had nothing to do with that from TFA. He was using his programmable keyboard to fight a group unattended, which in my book is considered a macro cheat. He should have been banned, and was.
Except he didn't configure it to do the macros automatically so he couldn't just walk away. Looking at the article, he was watching TV on his other monitor which is situated right next to the one displaying WoW. He was keeping an eye on his character in WoW to determine when to hit the next macro key while watching TV. Unfortunately it looks like he probably didn't keep an eye on his chat box and missed an IM to check if he was actually there or not. I have to admit, when I was doing some mindless task in an MMO I usually didn't notice the chat box either because I was watching TV or reading a book too. Looks like either he just got caught not paying enough attention to the game and he missed the message, or the admins just saw that he was doing the same thing over and over and the abilities were being used in the same order with the same delay between them and decided to suspend him without checking with a message to the player.
It appears a game master (GM) approached him in-game and he did not respond -- he was watching a movie and pressing the keyboard buttons without watching the screen.
Put yourself in the GM's position. A character repeatedly performs the same action hundreds of times. When sent messages (tells/whispers) the character does not respond. There is no other reasonable explanation than that the character is automated. Sure, weird situations like this particular one can occur, but is there really any way for Blizzard to see that it was not a bot? The guy pressed one button that caused his character to perform repeated tasks while the player was not watching the game. That is botting. The fact that the player pressed one button every few minutes does not mitigate the rule breaking.
I've noticed that Fasterfox's default setting is to be horribly abusive about page loading. I'm far more thorough about reading through settings than most people, and I toned it down from "Turbo Charged" to "Optimized".
:(
I'm hoping this isn't a trend, because Fasterfox really does make a HUGE pageloading difference.
Perhaps if I run a squid proxy on my network it would help too? There's only 3 machines here, my desktop, may laptop, and my wife's desktop.
Karma: Chameleon (mostly due to the fact that you come and go).
I did not submit this anonymously myself; I submitted under my own account a week or two ago. I guess someone else resubmitted it.
.Net framework - in other words, botting software doesnt work on WINE.
And just a minor remark here to people who claim I was botting. Please, go look up some botting software.
1) They virtually all need MS
2) Botting software runs around, taps mobs, kills them, loots them and repeats this process. I didnt. I did not loot, move, nor change target. Anyone with a WoW account can run to Thousand Needles, find a Windchaser creature, get a lowest level weapon and hit it indefinately, provided that you are a healing class.
Anyway, I mentioned this, but I can understand why people who quickly read would miss it.
This is not botting.
As a matter of fact, the behavior he described can be easily replicated on a standard keyboard using WoW's built-in API. It is a simple matter to write a macro that will watch your health, heal you if if drops below a certain threshold, switch weapons based on any of a number of circumstances... etc. Bind that macro to a key, and just press the key over and over. Perfectly legit.
He didn't say he was away from the keyboard, he simply said he was watching tv while grinding out weapon skill. If all you have to do is press one button... that seems entirely plausible. He's not gaining any extra information or abilities from the programmable keyboard, so I don't see the sense in this banning.
This is not the sig you're looking for.
"I think your only legitimate statement is that Logitech claims the keyboard is useable for WoW. Other than that, using macros is a definite nono."
If you RTFA, he provides a (now defunct) link to a post in the EU forums, with a quote, in which blizzard had stated that using keyboard macro functions is okay.
WoW already has great OpenGL support, it shouldn't be that hard for a company like Blizzard to port WoW to Linux.
There's already an online petition to get WoW ported to Linux claiming 23725 signatures (at the time of my posting this).
Sign it here.
(disclaimer: I'm not connected with the creaters/pwners of the site in any way what-so-ever, I just really want this to happen.)
You don't need to own or currently play World of Warcraft to sign; you just have to support the idea of it being ported to Linux. Please support this. This would make an incredibly strong argument for Linux as a viable gaming platform.
Umm, with Wine and perl making a bot is trivial. Not to mention that Wine has a nifty side effect of hiding the underlying linux proccesses from the running app -- in effect hiding your os and running linux apps from the scan that WoW does.
Except it didn't.
From Taco's post...
The name change isn't the issue as much as the completely random and inconsistent enforcement of rules (that may or may not be rules) by nameless, faceless people who live behind a wall of form letters, canned answers, and "we don't have to explain ourselves to you, citizen!" attitudes.
Oh really? Macroing is botting? Is that why programmable macros are a part of the game? He still had to control his character. If anything beyond him hitting that MoB had entered the situation, he would have had to intervene. The extensible UI of WoW lets you automate a TON of tasks. Additionally, the fact that his situation is outside the scope of their TOS definition of botting is a critical distinction. With the extensibility of the game, a clear-cut definition as to what qualifies as botting is very important. If his doesn't meet it, he shouldn't be charged with botting.
And tell me, holier than thou WoW player, have you never watched a movie while playing? Because in MC I have definitely done nothing but mash frostbolt when the hall trash gets pulled to my group while I sit and watch a movie.
Blizzard was entirely out of line this time.
Unfortunately, until people stop buying games, there will be almost no incentive for companies to add this. Remember, we all like Blizzard for being "for gamers by gamers", but the reality is that they revolve around the almighty buck.
Online Starcraft RPG? At
Dietary fiber is like asynchronous IO-- Non-blocking!
I have a Logitech and its not some super secret weapon that allows you to do all these things that you couldn't normally do. Really the best part of it for WoW is that the keyboard has extra keys so you can assign more buttons. You can create macros in game and assign them to a key on a normal keyboard. This is no different and is allowed via WoWs user interface. It isn't against their EULA to assign keys (even a macro to swap weapons) to a keyboard. If this person is telling the truth then he did nothing against their EULA.
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