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There's a lot of SE apologists in this forum. What you all don't realize is tell spam is virtually gone from most MMOs. Trion, Blizzard, SOE, etc... all have filters in place and proper blacklists. You do not receive SPAM in-game while trying to play and communicate. Gold sellers are reduced to sending in-game mails which are also usually blocked.
So... No... SE hasn't really done anything. It's very disappointing for a game of this size.
^ That's a report that's given almost every month, let alone there's TEMPORARY bans, so that's not really solving the problem.
There are games (TERA, Vindictus, Blade and Soul) that impose IP bans for other territories because most RMT come from there.
Other companies like Trion, Blizzard, ANet have filters and report buttons on hand for players to prevent such things.
FFXIV with over 3million players or so STILL can't seem to get a grasp on how to handle RMT
They do this every month or so.
Yet the problem persists and grows.
This isn't a viable long term solution.
Unfortunately as long as SE continues to think their reactive-only approach is going to work and they do nothing proactive, this problem will continue to grow and will never get better. It would actually be better if they did nothing, as they are wasting a large amount of time and resources going about it this way.
No, a new report is given weekly, this just happens to be the most recent one.
There are 64 temp bans and almost 11,000 permanent account bans, so how are temp bans the issue here?
Tell you what, go and look at the last 6 months of weekly reports and add up the number of accounts banned. Then come back and we'll talk about the scale of the issue and how much SE can/cannot do. Just for fun, add up the temp bans as well, the number is relatively miniscule compared to the permanent bans.
Also, the bans are *account* not character bans, suggesting that the number of affected characters could be far higher.
They could add a zero or two to that report to make it look better.
I could not agree more. Personally I don't think that permanent bans are the most effective way to punish the buyers, I'd like them to do something that causes more pain to the player caught with their hands in the cookie jar. I still believe that de-levelling all characters on their account by dropping all their classes to level 1 and forfeiting the amount of gil that they purchased (or all their gil if they have less left than they purchased) would be one way of handling it since it would force the player to re-invest the time in leveling their classes again giving them time to think about their offense. That's for first time offenders, second time offenders I would ban outright. If they won't do that, then simply permaban the accounts of buyers.