Mag7spy wrote: » TheClimbTo1 wrote: » Noaani wrote: » TheClimbTo1 wrote: » Noaani wrote: » TheClimbTo1 wrote: » Your idea is "Infiltrate, get past that silly ToS... then do what I want!". You start off shady. While I understand how you would arrive at this conclusion, it isnt quite accurate. Where I live, software ToS's can only involve discussions about how you use that software directly. Anything removed from that invalidates the entire ToS. Since I am able to use a combat tracker in association with Ashes without needing to actually be running Ashes at all (and in fact can run my tracker on a computer that doesnt even have Ashes installed), there is literally no legal way I am breaking the ToS - regardless of how it is written. If you want to say this amounts to infiltrating past the silly ToS, then I guess you can. At best, I would call it malicious compliance. I'll absolutely put my hand up for that one. So really, if your argument is "if you agree to the terms of service, you should stick to them", then all I can say is that under literally every scenario I have talked about (bar 1 extreme scenario), I have met my legal obligations under those terms - it just so happens that I am not as bound by them as some others may be (living in a place that puts people's rights ahead of company rights is fantastic). This is why I didnt bother discussing the ToS angel. I'm following the ToS to the level that I am required to follow it, regardless of what the ToS actually ends up saying - simplybecause everything I have talked about falls outside of what a software ToS can prevent me from doing. Now, going back to the point about good neighbors. Who is the better neighbor here - the person that wants to do an activity they are perfectly entitled to do, but who knows that the activity may upset his neighbors and so attempts to find a means by which said activity wont impact his neighbors, or the neighbor that wants to attempt to make it against the rules for the person to ever do that activity, despite there being no actual legal path to do so? Given this scenario, I know which of the two I would rather live next door to - clearly the person trying to make it work for both. Perhaps a better question is, which of these two people would you rather be yourself? So you will be content to never run Ashes with a combat tracker active. You will close the application of Ashes, then apply your combat tracker. Every time. Scouts honor? You'll take the extra time of doing it all out of game with Ashes closed. Right? I understand you properly? This is your intention? I wont need to. Assuming Intrepid opt to include a provision in the ToS that prevents us running a combat tracker at the same time as the game client (which, to be fair, is untested where I am from), I can just run it on a second computer. The aim is to get it running on a phone. Again, Intrepid have no scope to limit what I can do on my laptop or phone while playing Ashes on my gaming computer. I'd still like an answer to the comment about being a good neighbor. Which of the two do you consider to be the good neighbor - the one wanting to participate in an activity they have every right to participate in, bot who knows it will annoy their neighbor and so are trying to find a way to prevent that annoyance, or the neighbor that is trying g to make that activity against the rules, despite there being no grounds for doing so? Keep in mind, the first neighbor is well within his rights to perform said activity in the most obnoxious, in-your-face manner imaginable, but rather than doing that, is looking to find a better way. So you understand the spirit of the rule, that they don't want combat trackers used. But you have a loop hole, so it's all good. You don't care about the spirit of the rule, you have a nice little work around. So even if Ashes doesn't want Combat Trackers ran in game, stated as such... you don't care because they legally can't stop you. You are never the good neighbor, no matter how much you want to believe you are, when you don't care about the spirit of the Terms. When you agree to them because you know you have loopholes you can exploit. The game is based on not using Trackers. You don't like the reasons Steven has given for this. So you don't care about the rule, or the spirit of the game. That's the point, man. I'm glad you can sit in the corner and say "tee hee, LEGALLY he can't stop me." We already know the intent, it's been expressed. The community is behind the intent. You don't care about that. That's being a bad neighbor. But you'll never understand and never admit that. So that's cool. I'm done with you. You are going to do what ever you want to do, regardless of what the ToS or stated objectives by Intrepid are. That's just who you chose to be. That makes you a bad neighbor. Period. I'm not changing to meet you half way to be a good neighbor, because you don't care about the spirit of the game that Steven has put forth. Its why they need to lean more on the action combat side of things which will make those types of tools less and less important as it will be more about people that can land their hits and such.
TheClimbTo1 wrote: » Noaani wrote: » TheClimbTo1 wrote: » Noaani wrote: » TheClimbTo1 wrote: » Your idea is "Infiltrate, get past that silly ToS... then do what I want!". You start off shady. While I understand how you would arrive at this conclusion, it isnt quite accurate. Where I live, software ToS's can only involve discussions about how you use that software directly. Anything removed from that invalidates the entire ToS. Since I am able to use a combat tracker in association with Ashes without needing to actually be running Ashes at all (and in fact can run my tracker on a computer that doesnt even have Ashes installed), there is literally no legal way I am breaking the ToS - regardless of how it is written. If you want to say this amounts to infiltrating past the silly ToS, then I guess you can. At best, I would call it malicious compliance. I'll absolutely put my hand up for that one. So really, if your argument is "if you agree to the terms of service, you should stick to them", then all I can say is that under literally every scenario I have talked about (bar 1 extreme scenario), I have met my legal obligations under those terms - it just so happens that I am not as bound by them as some others may be (living in a place that puts people's rights ahead of company rights is fantastic). This is why I didnt bother discussing the ToS angel. I'm following the ToS to the level that I am required to follow it, regardless of what the ToS actually ends up saying - simplybecause everything I have talked about falls outside of what a software ToS can prevent me from doing. Now, going back to the point about good neighbors. Who is the better neighbor here - the person that wants to do an activity they are perfectly entitled to do, but who knows that the activity may upset his neighbors and so attempts to find a means by which said activity wont impact his neighbors, or the neighbor that wants to attempt to make it against the rules for the person to ever do that activity, despite there being no actual legal path to do so? Given this scenario, I know which of the two I would rather live next door to - clearly the person trying to make it work for both. Perhaps a better question is, which of these two people would you rather be yourself? So you will be content to never run Ashes with a combat tracker active. You will close the application of Ashes, then apply your combat tracker. Every time. Scouts honor? You'll take the extra time of doing it all out of game with Ashes closed. Right? I understand you properly? This is your intention? I wont need to. Assuming Intrepid opt to include a provision in the ToS that prevents us running a combat tracker at the same time as the game client (which, to be fair, is untested where I am from), I can just run it on a second computer. The aim is to get it running on a phone. Again, Intrepid have no scope to limit what I can do on my laptop or phone while playing Ashes on my gaming computer. I'd still like an answer to the comment about being a good neighbor. Which of the two do you consider to be the good neighbor - the one wanting to participate in an activity they have every right to participate in, bot who knows it will annoy their neighbor and so are trying to find a way to prevent that annoyance, or the neighbor that is trying g to make that activity against the rules, despite there being no grounds for doing so? Keep in mind, the first neighbor is well within his rights to perform said activity in the most obnoxious, in-your-face manner imaginable, but rather than doing that, is looking to find a better way. So you understand the spirit of the rule, that they don't want combat trackers used. But you have a loop hole, so it's all good. You don't care about the spirit of the rule, you have a nice little work around. So even if Ashes doesn't want Combat Trackers ran in game, stated as such... you don't care because they legally can't stop you. You are never the good neighbor, no matter how much you want to believe you are, when you don't care about the spirit of the Terms. When you agree to them because you know you have loopholes you can exploit. The game is based on not using Trackers. You don't like the reasons Steven has given for this. So you don't care about the rule, or the spirit of the game. That's the point, man. I'm glad you can sit in the corner and say "tee hee, LEGALLY he can't stop me." We already know the intent, it's been expressed. The community is behind the intent. You don't care about that. That's being a bad neighbor. But you'll never understand and never admit that. So that's cool. I'm done with you. You are going to do what ever you want to do, regardless of what the ToS or stated objectives by Intrepid are. That's just who you chose to be. That makes you a bad neighbor. Period. I'm not changing to meet you half way to be a good neighbor, because you don't care about the spirit of the game that Steven has put forth.
Noaani wrote: » TheClimbTo1 wrote: » Noaani wrote: » TheClimbTo1 wrote: » Your idea is "Infiltrate, get past that silly ToS... then do what I want!". You start off shady. While I understand how you would arrive at this conclusion, it isnt quite accurate. Where I live, software ToS's can only involve discussions about how you use that software directly. Anything removed from that invalidates the entire ToS. Since I am able to use a combat tracker in association with Ashes without needing to actually be running Ashes at all (and in fact can run my tracker on a computer that doesnt even have Ashes installed), there is literally no legal way I am breaking the ToS - regardless of how it is written. If you want to say this amounts to infiltrating past the silly ToS, then I guess you can. At best, I would call it malicious compliance. I'll absolutely put my hand up for that one. So really, if your argument is "if you agree to the terms of service, you should stick to them", then all I can say is that under literally every scenario I have talked about (bar 1 extreme scenario), I have met my legal obligations under those terms - it just so happens that I am not as bound by them as some others may be (living in a place that puts people's rights ahead of company rights is fantastic). This is why I didnt bother discussing the ToS angel. I'm following the ToS to the level that I am required to follow it, regardless of what the ToS actually ends up saying - simplybecause everything I have talked about falls outside of what a software ToS can prevent me from doing. Now, going back to the point about good neighbors. Who is the better neighbor here - the person that wants to do an activity they are perfectly entitled to do, but who knows that the activity may upset his neighbors and so attempts to find a means by which said activity wont impact his neighbors, or the neighbor that wants to attempt to make it against the rules for the person to ever do that activity, despite there being no actual legal path to do so? Given this scenario, I know which of the two I would rather live next door to - clearly the person trying to make it work for both. Perhaps a better question is, which of these two people would you rather be yourself? So you will be content to never run Ashes with a combat tracker active. You will close the application of Ashes, then apply your combat tracker. Every time. Scouts honor? You'll take the extra time of doing it all out of game with Ashes closed. Right? I understand you properly? This is your intention? I wont need to. Assuming Intrepid opt to include a provision in the ToS that prevents us running a combat tracker at the same time as the game client (which, to be fair, is untested where I am from), I can just run it on a second computer. The aim is to get it running on a phone. Again, Intrepid have no scope to limit what I can do on my laptop or phone while playing Ashes on my gaming computer. I'd still like an answer to the comment about being a good neighbor. Which of the two do you consider to be the good neighbor - the one wanting to participate in an activity they have every right to participate in, bot who knows it will annoy their neighbor and so are trying to find a way to prevent that annoyance, or the neighbor that is trying g to make that activity against the rules, despite there being no grounds for doing so? Keep in mind, the first neighbor is well within his rights to perform said activity in the most obnoxious, in-your-face manner imaginable, but rather than doing that, is looking to find a better way.
TheClimbTo1 wrote: » Noaani wrote: » TheClimbTo1 wrote: » Your idea is "Infiltrate, get past that silly ToS... then do what I want!". You start off shady. While I understand how you would arrive at this conclusion, it isnt quite accurate. Where I live, software ToS's can only involve discussions about how you use that software directly. Anything removed from that invalidates the entire ToS. Since I am able to use a combat tracker in association with Ashes without needing to actually be running Ashes at all (and in fact can run my tracker on a computer that doesnt even have Ashes installed), there is literally no legal way I am breaking the ToS - regardless of how it is written. If you want to say this amounts to infiltrating past the silly ToS, then I guess you can. At best, I would call it malicious compliance. I'll absolutely put my hand up for that one. So really, if your argument is "if you agree to the terms of service, you should stick to them", then all I can say is that under literally every scenario I have talked about (bar 1 extreme scenario), I have met my legal obligations under those terms - it just so happens that I am not as bound by them as some others may be (living in a place that puts people's rights ahead of company rights is fantastic). This is why I didnt bother discussing the ToS angel. I'm following the ToS to the level that I am required to follow it, regardless of what the ToS actually ends up saying - simplybecause everything I have talked about falls outside of what a software ToS can prevent me from doing. Now, going back to the point about good neighbors. Who is the better neighbor here - the person that wants to do an activity they are perfectly entitled to do, but who knows that the activity may upset his neighbors and so attempts to find a means by which said activity wont impact his neighbors, or the neighbor that wants to attempt to make it against the rules for the person to ever do that activity, despite there being no actual legal path to do so? Given this scenario, I know which of the two I would rather live next door to - clearly the person trying to make it work for both. Perhaps a better question is, which of these two people would you rather be yourself? So you will be content to never run Ashes with a combat tracker active. You will close the application of Ashes, then apply your combat tracker. Every time. Scouts honor? You'll take the extra time of doing it all out of game with Ashes closed. Right? I understand you properly? This is your intention?
Noaani wrote: » TheClimbTo1 wrote: » Your idea is "Infiltrate, get past that silly ToS... then do what I want!". You start off shady. While I understand how you would arrive at this conclusion, it isnt quite accurate. Where I live, software ToS's can only involve discussions about how you use that software directly. Anything removed from that invalidates the entire ToS. Since I am able to use a combat tracker in association with Ashes without needing to actually be running Ashes at all (and in fact can run my tracker on a computer that doesnt even have Ashes installed), there is literally no legal way I am breaking the ToS - regardless of how it is written. If you want to say this amounts to infiltrating past the silly ToS, then I guess you can. At best, I would call it malicious compliance. I'll absolutely put my hand up for that one. So really, if your argument is "if you agree to the terms of service, you should stick to them", then all I can say is that under literally every scenario I have talked about (bar 1 extreme scenario), I have met my legal obligations under those terms - it just so happens that I am not as bound by them as some others may be (living in a place that puts people's rights ahead of company rights is fantastic). This is why I didnt bother discussing the ToS angel. I'm following the ToS to the level that I am required to follow it, regardless of what the ToS actually ends up saying - simplybecause everything I have talked about falls outside of what a software ToS can prevent me from doing. Now, going back to the point about good neighbors. Who is the better neighbor here - the person that wants to do an activity they are perfectly entitled to do, but who knows that the activity may upset his neighbors and so attempts to find a means by which said activity wont impact his neighbors, or the neighbor that wants to attempt to make it against the rules for the person to ever do that activity, despite there being no actual legal path to do so? Given this scenario, I know which of the two I would rather live next door to - clearly the person trying to make it work for both. Perhaps a better question is, which of these two people would you rather be yourself?
TheClimbTo1 wrote: » Your idea is "Infiltrate, get past that silly ToS... then do what I want!". You start off shady.
Otr wrote: » The logic is like in any other game. - when you cannot satisfy opposite audiences, you have to choose one. - they might see a risk for the game dynamic, if the players who use trackers will be in the game. Risk = things which are unknown. Here the wiki quote: "The developers believe that parsers (DPS meters) can have negative effects" Everybody sees risks differently and drives his busyness according to them. Is that not a good enough argument for you? - another reason is that they try to influence the players, to play differently. They want to slow players down, to not rush to and through such content: no teleporters, no group finder, not trackers ( mentioned that before ) - another quote from wiki "The goal is to mitigate and make the practice less prevalent through the ease that DPS meters provide."
You see? This is your problem. Lack of seeing how others can enjoy the game. They don't make the game for you.
Noaani wrote: » TheClimbTo1 wrote: » That makes you a bad neighbor. Period. I'm not changing to meet you half way to be a good neighbor, because you don't care about the spirit of the game that Steven has put forth. Perhaps this is where we disagree. You seem to think that Intrepid are able to dictate my rights to me. That is an odd stance to take, as they clearly are not. Your stance would make more sense (perhaps) if I were obliged in any way to follow everything Intrepid say. You may be in a part of the world where you are required to do this (I don't know, nor care), and if that is the case I can understand your position (you am obliged to do as they say, therefore everyone should be obliged to do as they say). However, that isn't the case. Different parts of the world have different laws, and those living in those parts of the world only need to follow their local laws. Fun fact, even if the ToS says any arbitration needs to take part in a specific location, if the ToS is agreed to where I am from (even if just flying over), then that clause is invalid. If you start from the perspective of Intrepid not being able to dictate my rights to me, and work back from there, what we have is the following; I want to do an activity I am perfectly allowed to do. There are no controls at all on my participating in this activity. However, I know this activity will annoy some people a little, and so I am suggesting we find some controls that I can opt in to, in order to make me participating in this activity less annoying to those that would be annoyed by it. I do not have to do this, as there are no controls at all on that activity so I can participate in it at will, as much as I like, when ever I like. I am simply doing this for no reason other than to annoy those people less - even though it means giving up a small amount of my freedom. Rather than saying sure, lets work out a way to make that happen, you are saying no, this irrelevant body over there says you shouldn't do that activity, and so I think you shouldn't do it at all. You are then accusing me of being the bad neighbor, despite me being the one trying to find the best solution, and you being the one saying I shouldn't do the thing I am perfectly allowed to do. I find this to be an odd stance. To me, the good neighbor is the one willing to work out a compromise that best suits everyone, rather than the one saying "no, do it my way, and that is the end of the discussion". To me, that person is literally the definition of the bad neighbor. What you are essentially saying is that I should throw away my Democratic Rights, because Intrepid said so. Worse, you are saying that me opting to not throw away said rights is somehow a loophole, rather than being the obvious way it should be.
TheClimbTo1 wrote: » That makes you a bad neighbor. Period. I'm not changing to meet you half way to be a good neighbor, because you don't care about the spirit of the game that Steven has put forth.
TheClimbTo1 wrote: » The problem is this. It's never once crossed your mind that the best stance to take might be playing the game the way the developers intend it to be played.
There is a Good Neighbor avenue to be taken here. It's respecting the Developers and playing the game the way they are trying to set it up to be played... which is without combat trackers. You absolutely refuse that.
Ever stop to think that by completely disregarding the intent of the Developer that YOU are starting off on the wrong foot?
Noaani wrote: » TheClimbTo1 wrote: » The problem is this. It's never once crossed your mind that the best stance to take might be playing the game the way the developers intend it to be played. People shouldn't have go out of their way to use a product how it is designed, a product should be designed with how people will use it in mind. If you create an MMORPG, people are going to use combat trackers. As such, create your MMORPG with that in mind. There is a Good Neighbor avenue to be taken here. It's respecting the Developers and playing the game the way they are trying to set it up to be played... which is without combat trackers. You absolutely refuse that. Yeah, I am all for a compromise of some sort, as should be obvious. What you are talking about here though, that isn't a compromise (I don't think that word means what you think it means). What you are talking about here is capitulation, not compromise. You want everyone to just do what you want, without compromise at all. Ever stop to think that by completely disregarding the intent of the Developer that YOU are starting off on the wrong foot? Nope. I started out in this thread stating that myself and many others will use trackers in Ashes. This was before Intrepid made their stance on them public. When they decided that they were not keen on trackers, they already knew that people would use them, and that there was nothing they could do to stop it. They knew that the best they could hope for was something similar to FFXIV, yet they decided to be against them anyway. How can you then claim that is me that started off on the wrong foot and not Intrepid?
TheClimbTo1 wrote: » They've stated that don't want them used. That's the intent and idea of the game, to go back before Trackers and not use them.
Mag7spy wrote: » There is a reason why its only you and teem to time a small handful of others fighting for it. No one else wants DPS meters.
beapo wrote: » In games that had a dps meter it always got toxic at some point when you didn't do as much dmg as everyone else. In Lost Ark on the other hand it didn't experience people getting toxic because of low damage.
Ceepex wrote: » Please no DPS meter. It breaks immersion in my opinion. If it is an optional personal thing it is fine I guess, but don't make other people able to see each other's dps/hps output, because it will take away focus from the game itself and make it a war of numbers which would be a shame.
Weejeez wrote: » Mag7spy wrote: » There is a reason why its only you and teem to time a small handful of others fighting for it. No one else wants DPS meters. Not true I really like them (mainly in endgame content) and everyone I've ever played with agrees with this. I choose not to post here because Noaani is doing a great job advocating why they are wanted, aren't the root-cause of toxicity and also comes up with solutions.
beapo wrote: » In Lost Ark on the other hand it didn't experience people getting toxic because of low damage.
Noaani wrote: » TheClimbTo1 wrote: » They've stated that don't want them used. That's the intent and idea of the game, to go back before Trackers and not use them. Yeah, but they only stated that after consideration of the discussion in which they were told that they will be used regardless of what decision they go with. I didn't say "fuck what you say, I'm using them anyway". What happened is I said I was going to use them, along with many other players and they said "fuck that, we don't want you to" (or actually, they said "we don't support that"). You seem to have the order of events backwards here. Intrepids decision on this matter was made while knowing people - myself included - will use them anyway. I'm curious as to why you think they are against the spirit of the game - this isn't a statement Steven has made.
Noaani wrote: » Ceepex wrote: » Please no DPS meter. It breaks immersion in my opinion. If it is an optional personal thing it is fine I guess, but don't make other people able to see each other's dps/hps output, because it will take away focus from the game itself and make it a war of numbers which would be a shame. @Ceepex I agree it shouldnt be something that people feel the need to have on screen at all during content. This is something I have always considered a misuse of combat trackers. My question is, would it concern you at all if I had one that I could use with my guild, but if you and I were in a group (assuming you are not in my guild), I am unable to see anything you are doing?
TheClimbTo1 wrote: » The Devs aren't here to negotiate with you. You even say they put out feelers to get a sense of what the community wanted, and AFTER THAT said "We are going with No Trackers". That means that got the info from the COMMUNITY, and from that likely saw THE COMMUNITY at large didn't want them.