• On CHOW: Can girls use the guys' bathroom?
March 27, 2008 9:20 AM PDT

Blizzard sues over 'WoW' bot

by Daniel Terdiman
  • Font size
  • Print
  • 2 comments

'World of Warcraft' publisher Blizzard Entertainment is embroiled in a legal dispute with a man who it says makes a bot that automatically replicates many in-game actions.

(Credit: Blizzard Entertainment)

We've long known that publishers of massively multiplayer online games like World of Warcraft don't like it when players mess with the purity of their games.

That's why they routinely issue stern warnings that anyone caught gold farming or buying accounts or using bots that automate various processes will be punished in some way, including being banned from the game.

But now, it seems, WoW publisher Blizzard Entertainment is taking its enmity toward this kind of behavior to the courts.

As reported by the BBC, Blizzard has sued the creator of a program, or "bot," known as MMO Glider. According to the MMO Glider site, the "tool...plays your World of Warcraft character for you, the way you want it. It grinds, it loots, it skins, it heals, it even farms soul shards...without you."

That is anathema to Blizzard, and the company is trying to get the courts to stop Glider's creator, Michael Donnelly, from selling it.

Blizzard's court filing asserts that "Blizzard's designs expectations are frustrated, and resources are allocated unevenly, when bots are introduced into the WoW universe, because bots spend far more time in-game than an ordinary player would and consume resources the entire time," according to the BBC.

Blizzard also argues that Glide infringes its copyright, the BBC writes, "because it copies the game into RAM in order to avoid detection by anti-cheat software."

But the legal drama doesn't end there. In his legal response, Donnelly retorts that Glide doesn't infringe Blizzard's copyright because the program doesn't create any copies of WoW code.

For now, the two sides are lining up their lawyers and awaiting the next step in what is sure to be a long, drawn-out legal wrangling. One does wonder, however, how an individual like Donnelly will be able to hold out against the formidable resources of an outfit like Blizzard, which is owned by conglomerate Vivendi.

To me, this is an interesting situation. There's no doubt that MMO publishers want to keep players from using cheats like Glider, and there's equally no doubt that people will always be coming up with ways to subvert the system and search out little edges like those to automate tasks that result in performance awards.

Yet this case may not help resolve the age-old game play issues that have engaged many a scholar and player. That's because it may instead revolve around hard-core technical issues surrounding what exactly happens when players use Glider.

This, in some ways, is too bad because I think a lot of people are looking for some actual legal resolution of game-play issues. But if the court ends up making a decision that doesn't touch on such dilemmas, we'll just keep waiting for the next situation that will bring these issues before the bar.

Daniel Terdiman is a staff writer at CNET News covering games, Net culture, and everything in between. E-mail Daniel.
Recent posts from Geek Gestalt
In depth with Tiny Speck's Glitch
Watching the birth of Flickr co-founder's gaming start-up
Stewart Butterfield's Tiny Speck team
Boeing's next-gen 747 takes first flight
Boeing unveils 787 Dreamliner interior
WoW auction house app coming to iPhone
Global video game sales fell 7 percent in 2009
'Avatar,' 'Star Trek,' 'District 9' get visual-effects Oscar nods
Add a Comment (Log in or register)
You have to love contextual advertising.
by Sabocat March 27, 2008 11:56 AM PDT
The first three ads at the bottom of the page are <br />Wow stat bot v2.0<br />Buy Cheap ®WoW Gold<br />World ofWarcraft Cheats<br /><br />Exactly the sort of thing Blizzard is trying to counter.
Reply to this comment
Documents
by bduranske March 27, 2008 5:50 PM PDT
FYI - I'm not sure if BBC got this elsewhere, or just didn't credit, but I'm actually hosting the documents (including an expert report from none other than Dr. Castronova in support of Blizzard) at Virtually Blind if any readers are curious. There's some commentary as well. I don't remember if links work here and I don't see a preview button, but I'll try to paste the link in.<br /><br /><a class="jive-link-external" href="http://virtuallyblind.com/2008/03/23/mdy-blizzard-motions/" target="_newWindow">http://virtuallyblind.com/2008/03/23/mdy-blizzard-motions/</a>
Reply to this comment
advertisement

Google's social side aims for some Buzz

Facebook and Twitter are the darlings of the social-media world, not Google--which hopes to change that with Buzz, betting it can organize your online social life.

Watching the birth of a gaming start-up

Stewart Butterfield and his friends are back at it with a new company. CNET's Daniel Terdiman was given exclusive, behind-the-scenes access as they built it from scratch.

About Geek Gestalt

Daniel Terdiman, uniquely positioned to take you into the middle of another side of technology, chronicles his explorations of the "fun beat," from cultural phenomena such as Burning Man to cutting-edge aircraft to game conventions.

Add this feed to your online news reader

Geek Gestalt topics

advertisement
advertisement

Inside CNET News

Scroll Left Scroll Right