- Aug 26, 2004
- 14,685
- 1
- 76
Originally posted by: RBachman
Old news. I'm usually staunchly against invasions of privacy, but in this case I'm behind Blizzard. Cheaters in online games should die :|
Originally posted by: quakefiend420
Originally posted by: RBachman
Old news. I'm usually staunchly against invasions of privacy, but in this case I'm behind Blizzard. Cheaters in online games should die :|
so you're ok with blizzard possibly pulling personal info out of other windows open on your comp?
Originally posted by: RBachman
Old news. I'm usually staunchly against invasions of privacy, but in this case I'm behind Blizzard. Cheaters in online games should die :|
Originally posted by: diegoalcatraz
I don't know much about OS design, but ideally shouldn't process memory be private, or at least be protected from non-admin applications?
Originally posted by: Cander
Originally posted by: quakefiend420
Originally posted by: RBachman
Old news. I'm usually staunchly against invasions of privacy, but in this case I'm behind Blizzard. Cheaters in online games should die :|
so you're ok with blizzard possibly pulling personal info out of other windows open on your comp?
They arent pulling personal information out of anything. They are creating a unique hash of the title bar of the app and comparing it against a list of unique hashes that match known cheat applications.
Originally posted by: RBachman
Old news. I'm usually staunchly against invasions of privacy, but in this case I'm behind Blizzard. Cheaters in online games should die :|
Originally posted by: Oakenfold
Originally posted by: Cander
Originally posted by: quakefiend420
Originally posted by: RBachman
Old news. I'm usually staunchly against invasions of privacy, but in this case I'm behind Blizzard. Cheaters in online games should die :|
so you're ok with blizzard possibly pulling personal info out of other windows open on your comp?
They arent pulling personal information out of anything. They are creating a unique hash of the title bar of the app and comparing it against a list of unique hashes that match known cheat applications.
You are trusting them to do only what you stated with the information that is available to them.
I don't understand the technicality of this so if I'm off mark here forgive me but that's quite a bit of trust to put in someone. Tthey have the info to compare, there's nothing to prevent other information from being retrieved.
Originally posted by: Joemonkey
Originally posted by: Oakenfold
Originally posted by: Cander
Originally posted by: quakefiend420
Originally posted by: RBachman
Old news. I'm usually staunchly against invasions of privacy, but in this case I'm behind Blizzard. Cheaters in online games should die :|
so you're ok with blizzard possibly pulling personal info out of other windows open on your comp?
They arent pulling personal information out of anything. They are creating a unique hash of the title bar of the app and comparing it against a list of unique hashes that match known cheat applications.
You are trusting them to do only what you stated with the information that is available to them.
I don't understand the technicality of this so if I'm off mark here forgive me but that's quite a bit of trust to put in someone. Tthey have the info to compare, there's nothing to prevent other information from being retrieved.
WoW players are also trusting them with their credit card info...
Originally posted by: Oakenfold
Originally posted by: Cander
Originally posted by: quakefiend420
Originally posted by: RBachman
Old news. I'm usually staunchly against invasions of privacy, but in this case I'm behind Blizzard. Cheaters in online games should die :|
so you're ok with blizzard possibly pulling personal info out of other windows open on your comp?
They arent pulling personal information out of anything. They are creating a unique hash of the title bar of the app and comparing it against a list of unique hashes that match known cheat applications.
You are trusting them to do only what you stated with the information that is available to them.
I don't understand the technicality of this so if I'm off mark here forgive me but that's quite a bit of trust to put in someone. Tthey have the info to compare, there's nothing to prevent other information from being retrieved.
Originally posted by: Cander
Originally posted by: Oakenfold
Originally posted by: Cander
Originally posted by: quakefiend420
Originally posted by: RBachman
Old news. I'm usually staunchly against invasions of privacy, but in this case I'm behind Blizzard. Cheaters in online games should die :|
so you're ok with blizzard possibly pulling personal info out of other windows open on your comp?
They arent pulling personal information out of anything. They are creating a unique hash of the title bar of the app and comparing it against a list of unique hashes that match known cheat applications.
You are trusting them to do only what you stated with the information that is available to them.
I don't understand the technicality of this so if I'm off mark here forgive me but that's quite a bit of trust to put in someone. Tthey have the info to compare, there's nothing to prevent other information from being retrieved.
And what makes you think that there is no possible way that any other piece of software on your computer could be doing, or may do similar things? There is nothing to prevent Adobe Acrobat, Flash, or any other piece of software that is likely on your system from doing the same thing. See the the spin there?
Fact is they are only doing as I mentioned, and to start fear mongering of what they COULD do is just plain FUD.
Besides, Blizzard already has all the personal info they need when you create an account. Name, address, CC number and expiraton.
Originally posted by: NeoV
It is worth noting that the author of this is a rather staunch anti-blizzard guy..
the people who complained about the battle-net emulators weren't doing it so they could play on their own LAN, they were mad because their pirated copies of WCIII wouldn't work without it.
Why would you have open programs that have any sensitive data in them when you are playing WoW anyway? I could maybe see something like an IM client, or a teamspeak program, but that is pretty much it....if you have Quicken open while you are playing WoW I really have to wonder why..
Sad, but companies need to take such measures to combat software piracy...I'm not overly happy that Windows allows this type of activity, but I don't blame Blizzard for trying to combat piracy and game exploits...remember, they have my Credit Card info already, so I'm not sure how this type of stuff is any more dangerous than that.
Originally posted by: Oakenfold
Originally posted by: NeoV
It is worth noting that the author of this is a rather staunch anti-blizzard guy..
the people who complained about the battle-net emulators weren't doing it so they could play on their own LAN, they were mad because their pirated copies of WCIII wouldn't work without it.
Why would you have open programs that have any sensitive data in them when you are playing WoW anyway? I could maybe see something like an IM client, or a teamspeak program, but that is pretty much it....if you have Quicken open while you are playing WoW I really have to wonder why..
Sad, but companies need to take such measures to combat software piracy...I'm not overly happy that Windows allows this type of activity, but I don't blame Blizzard for trying to combat piracy and game exploits...remember, they have my Credit Card info already, so I'm not sure how this type of stuff is any more dangerous than that.
I know what you mean, the thing is think about the world in general. Anandtech users are a bit savy, we don't respond to phising attempts in our email, we use firewalls and anti-virus, I personally am a performance slut so I close all of my applications when gaming however this doesn't mean that everyone else in the world is going to do such things. Personally I would be afraid that my hdd could be scanned, documents opened and data retrieved.
