Blizzard Sues Private Server Company, Awarded $88M
Cali Thalen writes "A private server company, Scapegaming (aka Alyson Reeves), was ordered to pay Blizzard Entertainment over $88 million in damages after losing a lawsuit that was concluded last week. Scapegaming was operating unauthorized World of Warcraft servers and using a micropayment system to collect money from the servers' user base, which according to the lawsuit amounted to just over $3 million. $85 million of that settlement was for statutory damages, and surprisingly only $63,000 in attorney's fees."
Did Reeves not see this coming?
and the rich get richer
I wish they would change it to say 'Activision Sues Private Company'. I don't want my superb memories of the games I played that started with a blue blizzard logo breaking through to be soiled by this bunch of evil goblins in suits. God knows Blizzard did not mind private servers before this (because they sucked).
I wish they would change it to say 'Activision Sues Private Company'. I don't want my superb memories of the games I played that started with a blue blizzard logo breaking through to be soiled by this bunch of evil goblins in suits. God knows Blizzard did not mind private servers before this (because they sucked).
Blizzard or Activision are also private companies so your suggested headline wouldn't tell us very much.
They should be suing Bobafett (resident of rwanda), i.e. John Doe.
QQ Alyson Reeves?
Somewhere along the chain, you have to pay for the hosting. Plus if you're getting money, there's another paper trail.
If you want to accept payments, then you need to have something "formal" somewhere
Why anyone would pay micro-payments towards a private server is beyond me. If you have ever wasted precious minutes of your life attempting to play on one you will soon see why it's just worth it to fork over 10-15 bucks a month for the real deal.
Does anyone know what that private server was giving when you paid them?
I can understand playing on private servers if it's free, but if you're going to pay money to play on a private server, why not just pay Blizzard and play on official servers? Usually the private servers are a little behind on content anyway.
I don't think there's really a way to turn it around and make excuses for the hosting company. I'm generally in favor of the small guys doing their own thing, even using someone's code - but in this case, it was purley for profit and not for fun any sort of personal enjoyment.
I do have a problem with the damages awarded though... I mean - How in the world did they come up with this figure?
The magical number is: 09 F9 11 02 9D 74 E3 5B D8 41 56 C5 63 56 88 C0
PayPal allows me to collect payments as well as pay for hosting without ever providing any kind of ID. Especially if you register your PayPal account in a small, less regulated country it's quite easy to "run" the operation off the books.
The problem starts when you want to withdraw money to a bank to get cash - or buy something online which requires shipping.
WOW! I know it's an open and shut case from the get go but with a company that big, usually $60,000 will barely get you a random word generator with text to speech representing you. For a quarter mil, you might even be able to get the disembodied voice that lives in my GPS to represent you. Somehow it always costs about a million for a supposedly "respectable" lawyer to even show up in court. What a joke. Oh well, at least they got around that this time somehow.
Google's Super Secret Search Algorithm: SELECT @search_results FROM internet WHERE @search_results = 'good'
Normally I don't feel that copyright infringement is a big deal, or automatically a bad thing, especially when it breaks down artificial limitations and restrictions.
But profiting from other people's work, work that you have no rights to, is just wrong.
Doesn't seem to be any details on what the microtransactions were for here, but apparently they were selling in-game items for real money. I find that disgusting even when it's legit. Ruins the value of actually playing the game.
We are all God's parents.
there was only $63,000 is attorneys fees because it was a default judgement and they did not have to present a case in front of the court. Likey the person will claim they were never served and demand there day in court. the judge will overturn the default judgement and the case will start over... or she will declare bankruptcy and the judgement will be discharged.. but maybe they will recover some of the 3 million
What I'm amazed is they got the server software in the first place. I guess the client software can be reversed engineered to point the client to the private server, but getting the inhouse server software is gotta be tough thing to do?
Played on it a long time ago when it was still known as WoWScape. It was the whole reason I actually started playing on retail, me and a good portion of my friends. Blizzard would have lost out on thousands of dollars from me and my friends if it wasn't for them.
Scapegaming actually was good enough that it got me (Feral druid), my best friend (Rogue), his roommate (Resto shaman), his roommates friends (Enhance shaman), their wife (Arms Warrior), neighbor down the road (Ret Paladin), Another friend (rogue), step brother (Rogue), another friend (Mage), and a few others. WoWScape actually got enough friends playing retail that we could host our own personal raids if we wanted.
Since then, all of us left. Scapegaming brought Blizzard a lot of business, but The Wrath of the Lich King ran them off. Only way I can tolerate WoW anymore is if I find an old TBC server now. Lasted till just before ICC was released on retail, but I just can't stand it anymore, it just isn't fun. Was fun back in the day raiding Kara, SSC, and the Eye just playing around, talking shit in Vent and having fun while half of them were wasted and still able to hold their own. Then 3.0 had to come and ruin it.
I honestly wonder about how much did Scapegaming make blizzard compared to how much it cost them. Wouldn't be surprised if it did them more good than harm. And don't try and mention the trail accounts on WoW, they capped you at level 10 and a bunch of other stuff, none of my friends were willing to try it like that. Actually downloaded the software off the internet months before we ever thought about registering a retail account.
Nuclear lawsuit detected.
The problem starts when you want to withdraw money to a bank to get cash - or buy something online which requires shipping.
Or do pretty much anything else with it. Really, try and find a way to actually use money garnered anonymously without leaving a trail for the courts to find.
Breaking a paper trail is damn difficult, and moreover tends to run into laws and agencies regarding money laundering. So if the people mentioned in the article had done so, they'd go from being pursued by Blizzard's lawyers to being pursued by the FBI, IRS or other TLAgency. Not really much of an improvement...
Erotic is when you use a feather. Exotic is when you use the whole chicken.
A properly done money laundering scheme wouldn't be traced that easily but I don't think money laundering usually takes its money from online services.
Justice is the sheep getting arrested while an impartial judge declares the vote void.
What else do you expect?
Blizzard refuses to accept the views and wishes of a large base of players who wish to only play vanilla or even just BC level servers before Jewavision completely ruined the game. They catered to a market ignored by the Jewavision overlords who wish to force everybody to expose every single piece of personal information possible because they have already sold it to anti-privacy whores like Facebook.
Figures a bunch of Jews and their Jews token jobs (the waste of life known as lawyers and their paid off court buddies) would rain hell down upon somebody only seeking to cater to an ignored and shit on market. It really is a damn shame the entire holocaust was a complete myth, that many vermin Jews getting what they so rightly deserved would have made the world only a much better place.
.WTF !?
You just edit this text file and it points WoW at a different server.
Just happens that WoW net traffic isn't encrypted and therefore people have reverse engineered the protocol and created their own servers.
Not really any different than any other reverse engineering I've heard of.
Is it copyright infringing if they made their own server software that mimics the client / server protocol?
Is it legal to ask for payment to connect to my web server?
Is it still legal if my server can speak the reverse engineered WoW protocol?
Is it common knowledge that Judges are ignorant of the technology they are asked to provide judgment over?
If you answered "no" to one of these questions you have been qualified as next in line for judicial appointment.
That's all the headline you need.
The higher the technology, the sharper that two-edged sword.
So does this precedent put other popular private servers for other popular MMORPGs in danger too, like the UOGamers private server of Ultima Online? (http://uogamers.com)
You're right, I wouldn't steal a car. But if it were possible, I sure as hell would download one!
Disallowing use of private servers sounds like Microsoft disallowing difference search engines for Internet Explorer.
Except that your computer software doesn't need World of Warcraft to run. A pretty big difference.
Imagine you owned a Chinese all you can eat buffet restaurant and one day these guys come in pay for the buffet but never leave, then they set up a stall inside your restaurant selling your buffet food much cheaper than you can as they have none of your overheads in buying stock and preparing it.
Blizzard worked very hard and continue to do so to produce their products, invested a lot of time and money and pay a many staff who have their own families to feed. Then these guys come in and start making bucket-loads of cash in part directly from Blizzards back pocket. Now its one thing to pirate a game you can't afford, its quite another to make loads of money hosting downloads of pirate games and pirate servers and these guys really do make a lot of money.
Sad day, I used to play one of the Scapegaming servers, and if it wasn’t for this “free trial” I would have never switched to Blizzard’s servers, which is what many people did, the others on the servers would have never paid $15 a month to play it, so I don’t think blizzard ever really lost as much as they thought they did, and they probably actually gained money from private servers like these.
Hmm what would you expect for a company that is basically stealing another companies IP? no surprises about the verdict..
What id have to ask was, What was the first company thinking? blatently stealing Blizzs' game like that? we all KNOW blizz hunts down copyright thieves...
Blizzard charge for the client, plus separate subscription fees to hook up to their servers. There is a clear separation of the money you pay for the client, and the money you pay to access Blizzards servers. The client is typically bought or downloaded and therefore once you've bought it you are free to use it as you wish, provided you don't distribute copies.
In theory, there should be nothing unlawful against hooking up to a different server as there is a clear separation here. The protocol can and has been reverse engineered The only question is whether any of Blizzards proprietary data is held on the server and "distributed" to the clients.
Presumably, the in-game items are not transferable from a private server to Blizzards server, so no issues there either.
This judgement was not defended, so the question arises as to whether it would be possible to mount a defence so as to make non-Blizzard servers legitimate?
Donte Alistair Anderson Roberts - hi son!
Karma: Chameleon
Nope, I wouldn't imagine anyone with two brain cells would use an online service to (attempt to) launder money. That's what bars, restaurants, and other businesses where lots of cash is exchanged and there are lots of "perishable" items that can be lost, destroyed, misdirected, etc. are for.
Now that they "won" I'm certain Blizzard will have no trouble collecting their $88 million awarded by judge Margaret.
You could donate the money to $organisation that doesn't ask you to provide any other personal details
EULA wasn't needed to run the game (copyright doesn't control use) and the protocols are not expressive therefore not copyrightable. So agreeing to the EULA means squat.
"Probably these arguments were a bit reaching... if CD Keys are not an anti-piracy measure, then what is their purpose?"
Fuck knows. But the cdkey was not being made available (this WOULD have required copyright license) and it doesn't stop you pirating the game, nor is bnetd's actions enabling piracy.
"On appeal... BNETD was ruled a circumvention tool based on Blizzard's argument. "
Which argument is complete bollocks, but they had money and are important.
"They failed to convince the court of the applicability of the exception to their situation. "
You mean the judge. See above.
There are probably two issues with running private servers of an MMORPG:
1) Your server will have to hold a copy of the data(the map, ..) of the official servers, thereby violating some copyright. Unless you create your own maps and content, but people will hate it.
2) The license to the client will probably allow you to only use official servers.
There are situations and setups where you might work around this, but I have the feeling that it hasn't been worked around both in ultima online and WoW private servers.
Hey don't blame me, IANAB
I try to be nice and keep on reporting phishes regarding WoW for weeks now, it has become kinda absurd as they are actually buying domains which contains their trademark and serving phishes for days.
Look at the live phishes (means, please don't go to them) right now, which are "online".
http://www.phishtank.com/target_search.php?target_id=88&valid=All&active=y&Search=Search
These are the WoW phishing pages. Some very known hosting companies (not some garage guys) are also being used. I think if Blizzard spends time/money to use one of them, admins will magically start caring.
BTW WoW is the only game which has its own category next to banks on phishtank, this seems to be a huge, organized thing. The pattern is always the same and some real advanced tricks are being used, it is not some "lets hack guys images directory and put a cgi to it" thing.
I am an intellectual property attorney. As others have pointed out, this $88M award is the result of a default judgment. It's pretty hard to argue to an appeals court that the trial court erred when you haven't preserved any of your arguments by, say, actually APPEARING in the trial court. Therefore, there are virtually no appealable issues. This case doesn't really mean anything. It has no precedential value whatsoever, and affects absolutely nothing about the state of copyright law. No future judge will cite a copyright case won on the basis of a default judgment as relevant copyright law, because nothing was actually argued. Blizzard didn't win because they were right, they won because Alyson Reeves didn't even file an answer to their complaint after being (apparently) validly served. None of the potentially valid arguments advanced by the operators of private servers have been rejected as a result of this case. Even examining the damages amount has absolutely no worth whatsoever, because it was based on Blizzard's calculation of statutory damages using what they allege is the number of instances of infringement. In a real case, the plaintiff and defendant would have argued about what constituted separate instances of infringement, etc. That didn't happen here. In short, there is nothing to see here, and this is not really news.
> PayPal allows me to collect payments as well as pay for hosting without ever providing any kind of ID.
Oh that's really funny. PayPal deposits it into a Swiss bank numbered account do they?
A private server company, Scapegaming (aka Alyson Reeves), was ordered to pay Blizzard Entertainment over $88 million in damages after losing a lawsuit that was concluded last week
Is there some reason I should know of Alyson Reeves more so than Scapegaming ? A quick Google did give some background on the company but not who this person is. I don't play WoW so can someone fill me in ?
It looks like:
- Alyson never responded to any service, complaint, or judgement. Default. MAYBE Scapegaming gets an appeal of the judgement, but that will require showing that multiple services were deficient. Good luck with that.
- Blizzard's counsel repeatedly failed. Insufficient service, missed deadlines, one dismissal for failure to prosecute. I think $63k is overpaying them.
- A judge recused themselves. Interesting, must have had stock or played in their free time...?
- This has been going on for nearly a year. Seems that Blizzard could have wrapped this up in 3 months had they been diligent.
Wow. Overall, a good case study in how long you can string out a suit by doing NOTHING. I'm surprised the judge let them reinstate.
Oh well, expect this to result in no money, siezure, and no more Scapegaming. Alyson will probably change her name, change the server names on the new hoster, and Blizzard will play whack-a-mole chasing her around. Funny.
deleting the extra space after periods so i can stay relevant, yeah.
Could this case be an example of DCMA's loophole for compatibility?
Should they be allowed to stop competing services from talking to their software?
You BUY the software and then have a monthly service fee you are tied to - but you can not switch-- sure they do not have to open it up, but how can they legally stop some 3rd party from competing for that service?
They can make money from the software alone, which has been the case for most software for decades; allowing reverse engineered competition would mean their business model would account for the situation and they could continue.
MICROSOFT's filesharing HAD a business model around making you pay for microsoft file servers - they could have argued that other SMB software interferes with their business model back before antitrust or possibly even today and shut down all 3rd party services providing SMB services or make them pay a huge license fee. Windows server is still making MS money even though file, email, calendar, etc. alternatives who are fairly compatible exist. They didn't seem to want to take on this battle but Blizzard is and they are winning. What happens when others try to use Blizzard to create their own legally protected little monopolies?
Think of how many people like classic games and think about all the modern games and how impossible it will be to ever go back and play them when not only the emulation environment is massive but ALSO the online server based community is mandatory and possibly a (limited existanse) DRM keyserver... You get sued for pulling all that off for some small die hard community using abandoned software.
Democracy Now! - uncensored, anti-establishment news
It was a nice experience a few years back, playing on WoWscape. I was able to just log in casually and play something that resembled an MMO; sometimes just logging in and doing some auction house arbitrage for fun. My regrets with it were that I saw level 70s show up to grief in the level ~30 areas when I got to around those levels. Many of them had the "Illidan" swords, which they had most likely donated for. Needless to say, this was not my thing, and the end goal and process of that didn't appeal to me much, so my levelling petered off very quickly, and eventually I stopped playing altogether.
I tried out several of the other larger servers, and the kind of problems that WoWscape had also existed there: corrupt staff, donations for gear, gear for "voting" for their server, and other such externalities. Now, I know the economic argument behind the idea behind the economy in all of these MMOs, and that you cannot eliminate money for gear, because there will be someone who will take the time to farm it and sell it, and the whole cycle around what it takes to shut that down. It's for those reasons that I think I will not be able to ever enjoy an MMO that doesn't reset itself every so often. But, I do have an idea of what kind of a server I may like to play on -- a year or two ago, there was a private server entirely dedicated to roleplay. I cannot remember the name of it. Essentially, you would log in, and the process itself was the end and the means; not preventing goal-oriented play from existing, but not stagnating into becoming a Skinner-lead player, a stimulus-responder as the pinnacle of play.
Also, most competent law offices hire a good process server, sometimes a sheriff's deputy, to serve notice and log that fact. You can't then say "Uhhh but I didn't get it."
Nothing wrong with that, I've gotten tired of it several times. Just stop playing it. If you feel like playing again later, come back. It doesn't have to be some epic decision or involve drama, just shut down your account, and if you want turn it back on later. Interest in games can wax and wane, in particular if you've played for a long time.
Generally the people I see who complain about a new expansion just need a break. Things are going to change and many people don't like change. So they get angry about it, rather than considering if actually it might be fun. Just take a break. Also one problem Blizzard does have for sure given their long expansion cycles and ridiculous gear scaling rates is that there isn't a tons to do before a new expansion comes out. No problem, just stop playing then. Cancel your account and wait until the expansion hits and then reactive. Or don't, if you've found another game you like better.
It needn't be a big deal.
So you make sure you're not a resident of the US and if you are you get someone else to do it. Open a bank account in country x and use that to make and receive payments. A VISA card in any country is just as good as in the US.
Does that mean I need to quit using the old line "To err is human; to really fowl things up requires a computer"?
Any lawyer would have been a start.
Scapegaming didn't bother to show up, that's why Blizzard received a default judgment.
Like they say, you must be in it to win it.
Security is mostly a superstition... Avoiding danger is no safer in the long run than outright exposure. - Helen Keller
To fowl thinks up you need a duck.
Geeks are so full of shit that "beating the crap out of them" takes a whole new meaning.
It's too bad Ms. Reeves didn't elect to mount a defense, so that the case could be tried on its merits. If Blizzard elects to distribute a networked game client for free, and users elect not to connect to Blizzard's servers, that sounds like Blizzard's problem, not the 3rd party server admins. Unless Reeves was cut-and-pasting Blizzard's graphics, text, etc, and was referencing "World of Warcraft" without a trademark disclaimer, or was running a purloined copy of Blizzard's server software, I'm not sure where copyright infringement comes into play.
The client EULA applies to the users, not the server admin. Even if the EULA forbid running a server, the admin isn't a party to the contract.
I initially assumed that Blizzard was suing on the basis of the Blizzard v. bnetd, but Blizzard's pages on the subject don't make that clear, and I'm too cheap to pay rfcexpress.com or PACER to find out.
Luke, help me take this mask off
I can't wait until PvPGN has a better peer system to de-centralize everyone's network play just so that none can get harassed for fair-use of their software they are RENTING from Blizzard-Vivendi.
Think about it. If you can't prove actual damages, then the Statutory damages awarded to a party are proof-enough of a counterfeiting operation. I don't see Churches suing other Churches for accepting Offerings that would've otherwise arrived at a more prominent Church.
If you had no liability to provide service to a client, then you have no right to sue and no damages. Is this to say that all customers renting a Blizzard product are stuck in a bottle and can only enjoy the contents through the corked-mouth without cracking the glass? I'm a former glazier, by the way...jews bought all the infrastructure through CR Laurance and Dow Corning and exported most of the labor positions to slave-labor in other countries to further diminish the life expectancy of Americans that are unable to compete with enslaved foreigners' products.
If you've ever been playing WoW when the server goes down, you can keep running around cause the client doesn't time you out right away as its still waiting for the server to communicate with it. When you do this, if you keep running far enough in one direction you'll eventually just hit a place where the world 'ends' because you don't have the map data beyond that point.
Bullshit. It ends because the client isn't getting the server request to load local data. There are millions of subscribers, do you really think Blizzard would want to up the bandwidth cost by transferring that information over and over again for no reason?
Besides, just look at your WoW hard-drive install. What do you think those gigabytes of files are?
I don't buy it. How the fuck are there *statutory damages* for a subscription MMORPG? How the fuck did government determine those? Who was on the panel? When was it held?
How does the government determine the value of something which was not stolen? Those people know who they were sending their money to. They were responsible for their own client software. What was stolen by running a server?
People need to get over their sympathies for big organizations like this. Just because they can get away with something doesn't mean they should. Government exists for the social good, not the good of the few organizations with the power to manipulate government itself.
It is up to you and your peers to decide what is right and wrong, not the victim and their lobbyists.
Sure it has old and dated graphics but it has the best gameplay of any mmog. It's loot system and character skills make for non cookie cutter templates. The game has changed a lot since it's debut over 10 years ago and there's so much content you'll never come close to seeing it all.
Come visit us on the Frostfell server. There's a free trial. And it's only 10 bucks to purchase the game and all of it's expansions.
Why not award 12 Kajillion dollars? It has about the same chances of actually getting paid.
Decisions like this are stupid.
Alyson can't comment on this because there is a counter lawsuit about to be filed and rightfully so. First, I will say I am in her life every single day so I can tell you I know the intricate details of this case. Back in 09, two lawyers and a bodyguard showed up at her front door. Our reasoning to the bodyguard is because her husband just got out of Special Forces. He was injured in Iraq by a bomb and received the Purple Heart award. This was something that she talked about publicly as she is so proud of him and what he sacrificed so that people and even companies such as Bliz can have a company.
They sat down with paperwork and acted as if they didn't want to file it at all. Afterall; the servers were not up anymore at that point. She had decided to move on as it was just too stressful. They wanted to talk to her about the private server industry and what she could give them. She didn't give any info to them except that she didn't offer the download of the game on her site and that she ALWAYS encouraged her players to return to retail when they had new content for their player base. She also explained to them, because they are dumb as bricks as to WHY they lose their player base, that private servers catch falling off players that can't play due to losing a job, lack of new content in the game causing boredom and people not justifying paying for it anymore, but most importantly that most of the users there HAD retail accounts also. They left after speaking with her saying that they were not filing it right away. She continued to call the lawyer that Bliz contracts to stay in touch only to find out later that they filed it the morning after they left her house. That was their first lie. She continued to keep in touch with them and offered to help them with their business end of it because they obviously needed it with the player base falling off dramatically as it was. She is a brilliant business and marketing person and offered them that help which they for sure seemed interested in. Afterall, she was able to grow her player base so large because of the way she set up the structure. Bliz would be LUCKY to have her. The contracted lawyer kept saying "let me take this to them". She gave them her email so that they could get in touch with her and did not hide one bit from them. Facts are, the firm they contracted did not have Blizs' interest in mind, he was setting the trap and stalling. Through his stalling and leading her to believe they were in negotiations, dates were being set at court.
The amount they claim she made is bogus. The paypal records they got do not include chargebacks which most KIDS would do on the gear and equaled at least half of the amount they are claiming she made. The other submission they put in the evidence was a download made available that she did not know of, but also is pretty sure that was deleted after receiving a letter to do so. So after complying with their request, how can they use it in the case. The other was the EULA they included which was made and put on the site before she ever even knew of Scape.
Now you have extremely greedy Blizzard who went and changed the amount to award to 88 million AFTER the initial awarding of 24 million was the final judgement given and then you have Alyson who spent a few thousand to bury a teen in her community who drowned and his mom couldn't afford to bury her son. Someone she didn't even know but was aware of. Then another 15k to a wife and 2 year old daughter who lost their 32 year old father who couldn't get life insurance because of cancer. 2K to a family who's father was sick and lost his company and couldn't afford Christmas for his 6 kids. She didn't horde money and play unethically the way Blizzard does and has proven to in EVERY case they have taken to court. Recently showing how court happy they are, is a case in which they lost after suing a BOY for selling a card he purchased in his WOW cards for a mount in game. The judge LAUGHED it off and said "It is the same thing as baseball tradin
Blizzard gave away every single copy of the game that everyone using private servers had.
They pirated nothing. They did, however, violate their Terms of Use.
This gives me an idea for a business...I'm going to create content, give it away (explicitly stating that nobody is allowed to use it except for posting on my own website), and demand a cool $80,000,000 from every person I catch using it.
Hmmm, in the initial settlement, it was 24 million, then on the day in court when it was supposed to simply be filed and stamped closed the judge ups it to 88 Million???? I Know Alyson, she will come on here and thoroughly tell you verbatim what happened and expose the firm that Blizz contracts cases to even though they have their own internal law dept. WHY might they contract the other firm? Because they are willing to take unethical steps that Bliz didn't want to dirty their hands with. Many of you asked WHY did it take as long as it did. I will tell you this. The firm was in negotiations and at the same time making these court dates telling her, it is simply the way the law has to work for jurisdiction. She has a VERY strong counter suit against them but is interviewing all of the firms who have been in court with them before to pick the "bulldogs". It will be a very drama ridden case being that all parties who have been sued by Bliz will be called in to testify about their experiences with the legally unethical practices of the firm who filed this. Stay tuned...
Lets say someone sets up a website actually streaming Avatar movie in full length to users, do you think nobody will go after them?
WoW is actually Avatar sized, in terms of market value, the actual economy of it beating countries, a brand worth millions alone.
If users could be educated, there wasn't a problem like phishing anyway, from the beginning. I can tell you that they are under attack, the amount of phishes reported (and remember, that is community powered site) went rocket high lately.
If they don't care about their brand (I doubt), they should at least care about their users. Look what happened after MS sued the hell out of phishers.
All that ridiculous judgement is, is Blizs' way of beefing up their losses for their taxes. Being that the original judgement was 24M, then the judge changed it to 88M leaves you to wonder if he is involved with Bliz especially being that he excused himself from this case.