That's precisely what the Golden Rule is, what is considered "right" and "wrong". You can consider what you would not like to have done or said to you as "wrong".
And the Golden Rule applies differently to different people.
I, for one, would prefer if someone tells me that I’m doing things incorrectly. I don’t mind people correcting my mistakes, just as I will correct mistakes that I see. However, there are people out there who will not correct others and see any attempts at correcting them as personal affronts. See how this no longer works? Whose definition of the Golden Rule are we going by?
Different cultures have different ways of treating individuals; they have different standards. They may coincide with your own, or they may not. So, whose culture are we following here? Mine? Yours? Japan’s? America’s? England’s?
It’s narrow-sighted of you to try and apply your logical skills, your reasoning skills, and your version of “the Golden Rule” to other people because we all don’t think the way you do. Just like they don’t think the way I do. Or the way another poster does. The irony of this is, is that you are all for others not “dictating” their opinions on other people when you are trying to “dictate” your mindset and way of thinking onto others.
This rule is unenforceable. You cannot just apply a blanket to people of different backgrounds, upbringings, cultures, and traditions and call it a day.
Morals and morality go so far beyond “play nice, kids”. If you don’t understand that, then I don’t know what to say to you.
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Hyomin Park#0055
The way for determining a "reasonable person" is not based on culture. It's commonly used by lawyers. You're interpreting "reasonable person" incorrectly which is why you believe the rules are too vague, need a cultural distinction, or must be expounded upon.And the Golden Rule applies differently to different people.
I, for one, would prefer if someone tells me that I’m doing things incorrectly. I don’t mind people correcting my mistakes, just as I will correct mistakes that I see. However, there are people out there who will not correct others and see any attempts at correcting them as personal affronts. See how this no longer works? Whose definition of the Golden Rule are we going by?
Different cultures have different ways of treating individuals; they have different standards. They may coincide with your own, or they may not. So, whose culture are we following here? Mine? Yours? Japan’s? America’s? England’s?
It’s narrow-sighted of you to try and apply your logical skills, your reasoning skills, and your version of “the Golden Rule” to other people because we all don’t think the way you do. Just like they don’t think the way I do. Or the way another poster does. The irony of this is, is that you are all for others not “dictating” their opinions on other people when you are trying to “dictate” your mindset and way of thinking onto others.
This rule is unenforceable. You cannot just apply a blanket to people of different backgrounds, upbringings, cultures, and traditions and call it a day.
Morals and morality go so far beyond “play nice, kids”. If you don’t understand that, then I don’t know what to say to you.
"The reasonable person belongs to a family of hypothetical figures in law including: the "right-thinking member of society," the "officious bystander," the "reasonable parent," the "reasonable landlord," the "fair-minded and informed observer," the "person having ordinary skill in the art" in patent law, and stretching back to Roman jurists, the figure of the bonus paterfamilias,[1] all used to define legal standards. While there is a loose consensus in black letter law, there is no accepted technical definition. As with legal fiction in general, it is somewhat susceptible to ad hoc manipulation or transformation, and hence the "reasonable person" is an emergent concept of common law.[3] The "reasonable person" is used as a tool to standardize, teach law students, or explain the law to a jury.[2]"
If you notice the guideline about “contravening public order or morals”, there is no “reasonable person” definition applied there. As that is what is being discussed in my post, your point is completely irrelevant.The way for determining a "reasonable person" is not based on culture. It's commonly used by lawyers. You're interpreting "reasonable person" incorrectly which is why you believe the rules are too vague, need a cultural distinction, or must be expounded upon.
"The reasonable person belongs to a family of hypothetical figures in law including: the "right-thinking member of society," the "officious bystander," the "reasonable parent," the "reasonable landlord," the "fair-minded and informed observer," the "person having ordinary skill in the art" in patent law, and stretching back to Roman jurists, the figure of the bonus paterfamilias,[1] all used to define legal standards. While there is a loose consensus in black letter law, there is no accepted technical definition. As with legal fiction in general, it is somewhat susceptible to ad hoc manipulation or transformation, and hence the "reasonable person" is an emergent concept of common law.[3] The "reasonable person" is used as a tool to standardize, teach law students, or explain the law to a jury.[2]"
This is the only time that terminology is used:
Nowhere else:Expressions that any reasonable person would find offensive
◆Offensive expression
"Offensive expression" means an expression in general that inflicts emotional distress by being offensive to another person. Offensive expression may include:
・Aggressive expressions such as violent language/slander/insult/threat.
・Expressions that provoke or belittle another person, such as excessive criticism, negation/ridicule
・Expressions that significantly lack consideration for another person
・Expressions that unilaterally reject another person's opinion
・Expressions that any reasonable person would find offensive
・Expressions that compel a playing style
・Expressions that attempt to unilaterally exclude someone from the game or content/community, etc.
(Except when in accordance with rules set by an administrator such as a Free Company Master)
・Expressions that contravene public order and morals
・Other expressions that are offensive to another person
That being said, laws vary by country. I don’t think they’re all written with the same “universal” terminology. For all we know, there may be countries out there that don’t have legal definitions of “reasonable person”. But that definition is completely irrelevant here since it is written to only explicitly apply to that one guideline. Please pay attention to the context of what you are responding to before you formulate a response.
Last edited by HyoMinPark; 02-15-2019 at 03:06 AM.
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Hyomin Park#0055
You're right but that is likely the most important line of text in the entire text. That part has been the subject of debate throughout this thread and targeted for its presumed vagueness. When in fact, it isn't vague at all and is showing us that they are following the jurisprudence of "reasonable person". This is the most applicable type of rationale to use in a game where interactions are unreliable, random, and unique. Unlike a single player game your experience varies because the actions of people vary widely. It is because of the uniqueness of human beings that they must weigh every example or action that is reported differently. There cannot be a "standard" to follow when interactions vary so greatly.
It is for this reason that they are relying on the "reasonable person theory law".
That sheds light on how things will be evaluated and if they will be actioned. Whether or not someone intended to hurt people should not be in account just whether or not they did hurt people. There's no personal definitions here or definitions backed by culture. This is being weighed on the rules of public order and "reasonable person theory law".
It is only applied to that one sentence. Nowhere else in the Prohibited Activities. It’s not even used to define “deep emotional distress” (i.e., “what a reasonable person would consider deep emotional distress”).You're right but that is likely the most important line of text in the entire text. That part has been the subject of debate throughout this thread and targeted for its presumed vagueness. When in fact, it isn't vague at all and is showing us that they are following the jurisprudence of "reasonable person".
Which was my entire point: they cannot regulate “actions that contravene morals” because morals vary between people—there is no standard “this is always right” and “this is always wrong” outside of extreme examples like murder (but why would they be applying said examples to a video game?). Again, you are failing to pay mind to the context of my posts.This is the most applicable type of rationale to use in a game where interactions are unreliable, random, and unique. Unlike a single player game your experience varies because the actions of people vary widely. It is because of the uniqueness of human beings that they must weigh every example or action that is reported differently. There cannot be a "standard" to follow when interactions vary so greatly.
Sage | Astrologian | Dancer
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Hyomin Park#0055
If human interaction was this cut and dry we wouldn't have "reasonable person" law theory.It is only applied to that one sentence. Nowhere else in the Prohibited Activities. It’s not even used to define “deep emotional distress” (i.e., “what a reasonable person would consider deep emotional distress”).
Which was my entire point: they cannot regulate “actions that contravene morals” because morals vary between people—there is no standard “this is always right” and “this is always wrong” outside of extreme examples like murder (but why would they be applying said examples to a video game?). Again, you are failing to pay mind to the context of my posts.
In almost every MMORPG, including this one, there is no set defined rule for how a party will be actioned. It's on a case-by-case basis.
Even Blizzard uses reasonable law theory.
This is from the Blizzard EULA:
"Harassment, “griefing,” abusive behavior or chat, conduct intended to unreasonably undermine or disrupt the Game experiences of others, deliberate inactivity or disconnecting, and/or any other activity which violates Blizzard’s Code of Conduct or In-Game Policies."
In that example, one could argue that it's too vague or requires cultural distinction when in fact it does not. It only requires the game master to use "reasonable person" law theory when examining a situation which is pretty easy to do.
It's like the people who are for these rules cannot understand this. It's like they think that GMs are all robots with the same blue print of morals and standards. No guys just play nice! You'll be fine. It makes me wonder how long they have been on the internet because if rules can be abused ho boy are they gonna be! And personally, my morals and standards do not line up with the GM offices out of southern California!And the Golden Rule applies differently to different people.
Different cultures have different ways of treating individuals; they have different standards. They may coincide with your own, or they may not. So, whose culture are we following here? Mine? Yours? Japan’s? America’s? England’s?
It’s narrow-sighted of you to try and apply your logical skills, your reasoning skills, and your version of “the Golden Rule” to other people because we all don’t think the way you do. Just like they don’t think the way I do. Or the way another poster does. The irony of this is, is that you are all for others not “dictating” their opinions on other people when you are trying to “dictate” your mindset and way of thinking onto others.
This rule is unenforceable. You cannot just apply a blanket to people of different backgrounds, upbringings, cultures, and traditions and call it a day.
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