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JRPGfan said:

So this is about people makeing mods, and selling them for profit?

Not about if its legal to make mods in the first place?

 

Its weird the OP link redirects to a page about people useing Aim bots (cheats) in games, and not actually modding of games.

Anyways yeah I think its fine to stop people cheating in games.

However I dont think makeing mods to games should be illegal.

 

"However, neither defendant is being sued for the actual act of cheating; rather, Epic is suing both parties for alleged copyright infringement, arguing that the defendants' cheating is "infringing Epic's copyrights by injecting unauthorized computer code into the copyright protected code"."

^ hope this fails in court.

However I hope they still get banned, and ban anyone that is useing cheats.

Not even that, it's about people using mods online to cheat.
However since there's no regulation for that, Epic is using copyright law to try to take down mods :/

As I said before, banning people in free to play games has no effect. I guess you could try to ip ban them. Banning aim bot mods is another way, but I guess for that you first have to make all mods illegal and then allow the ones the publisher approves off. Which is ofcourse not in the interest of gamers.

Plus I guess it's cheaper for devs to make mods illegal than to write and continually update code to detect and counteract them, which can always be hacked again. However making mods illegal likely won't stop cheaters either, it will only hurt projects like Open IV.

I wonder what the reasoning behind this is at Epic. Do they want to sue all cheaters once they win this case or hope this is a good deterrent? I don't see anything positive that can come from this.