EVE is another MMO, but this one has a different set of rules, players can lie, cheat, and steal if they so choose. So if it is possible to steal items in the game how would the courts be able to justify a trial for theft of virtual items. Many games like World of Warcraft, Blade and Soul, Everquest, and much more have their own set of rules set in place for people that steal or hack in their games. Generally, the player that has broken the rules set will get banned, suspended, or even have everything removed from their character, depending on the offense. Many if not all casual gamers will agree that hacking is wrong and have no place in VR. Hackers can do many things within the games they are playing depending on their skill and the games security, such as manipulate data, writing own scripts, tools to view other players, key logging. People will pay for the items without know whether or not they were obtained legitimately or stolen. The ones that are victims of this act are left little or nothing in some cases. In EVE pirates destroyed a ship containing six years worth of game subscriptions worth over $1000. Take a second to imagine spending the time or possibly the money to fill the ship only to have it sunk by pirates, no possibility of retrieving them. For the players that live only for the game, it would destroy their "life" and even the casual
EVE is another MMO, but this one has a different set of rules, players can lie, cheat, and steal if they so choose. So if it is possible to steal items in the game how would the courts be able to justify a trial for theft of virtual items. Many games like World of Warcraft, Blade and Soul, Everquest, and much more have their own set of rules set in place for people that steal or hack in their games. Generally, the player that has broken the rules set will get banned, suspended, or even have everything removed from their character, depending on the offense. Many if not all casual gamers will agree that hacking is wrong and have no place in VR. Hackers can do many things within the games they are playing depending on their skill and the games security, such as manipulate data, writing own scripts, tools to view other players, key logging. People will pay for the items without know whether or not they were obtained legitimately or stolen. The ones that are victims of this act are left little or nothing in some cases. In EVE pirates destroyed a ship containing six years worth of game subscriptions worth over $1000. Take a second to imagine spending the time or possibly the money to fill the ship only to have it sunk by pirates, no possibility of retrieving them. For the players that live only for the game, it would destroy their "life" and even the casual