Calneon
8th July 2010, 10:49 AM
<img src="http://www.alttabbed.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/07/battle-book.jpg" alt="Battle.Book" title="battle-book" width="640" height="200" class="alignnone size-full wp-image-916" />
A few days ago, Blizzard made an <a href="http://forums.battle.net/thread.html?topicId=25626109041&sid=3000">announcement</a> that shocked the whole World Of Warcraft community, people who used to play but have quit, and even people who have never played the game before. Everyone seems to have an opinion on this, and almost all of those opinions are massively negative towards the idea.
<blockquote>The first and most significant change is that in the near future, anyone posting or replying to a post on official Blizzard forums will be doing so using their Real ID -- that is, their real-life first and last name -- with the option to also display the name of their primary in-game character alongside it. These changes will go into effect on all StarCraft II forums with the launch of the new community site prior to the July 27 release of the game, with the World of Warcraft site and forums following suit near the launch of Cataclysm. Certain classic forums, including the classic Battle.net forums, will remain unchanged.
The official forums have always been a great place to discuss the latest info on our games, offer ideas and suggestions, and share experiences with other players -- however, the forums have also earned a reputation as a place where flame wars, trolling, and other unpleasantness run wild. Removing the veil of anonymity typical to online dialogue will contribute to a more positive forum environment, promote constructive conversations, and connect the Blizzard community in ways they haven't been connected before. With this change, you'll see blue posters (i.e. Blizzard employees) posting by their real first and last names on our forums as well.</blockquote>
They are trying to justify the move by saying it will make the forums a better place with less trolling and spam, but it's not hard to see that there is a lot, lot more behind this move than what's on the surface. If their sole reasoning was to remove trolling, they could have made you post with your account, and not a specific character (at the moment, you can make a level 1 character and post completely anonymously), if your whole account was being shown, you would be more careful with what you post. Instead,*Blizzard look to be moving into Facebook territory. A move to Facebook integration with Battle.net could make a lot of money for both parties. As everyone knows, Farmville has a lot more players even than World Of Warcraft, and if Blizzard were able to tap into that market they could make a lot of money. It's not long before we see updates on Facebook saying, "John Smith needs one more Primordial Saronite for his Uber Epix chestplate, can anyone help him?", or, "Kate Bloggs has completed 75% of the achievement 'Collect 200 top hats for the homeless', that's amazing!".
However, in doing so, they are risking the security and privacy of all the people who post on the forum. In a community of millions of players, the chances are that some people are going to disagree with you and in very rare (but still possible) cases, want to take it further than just replying on the forum. Giving away your full name makes it incredibly easy to find out where you live, what your email address is, where you work, basically everything and anything about you. If the forums didn't show this information, it would be incredibly hard if not impossible to find out anything, unless you explicitly told the person your email/name. It's almost guaranteed that woman are not going to post on the forums anymore, as many hide behind male avatars so they don't get harassed and stalked online by lonely men. Employers will search for your name when considering you for a job and will find posts by you explaining why this DPS rotation is better than that one, and like it or not they might reject you for it. A fine demonstration of this going wrong was when Blizzard employee Bashiok, the poor fool, posted his real name on the official forums, and an hour later everybody knew his phone number, house, family, and <a href="http://wowriot.gameriot.com/blogs/Americans-are-bad-at-games/Real-Names-on-the-Official-Forums-New-REAL-ID-function?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm _campaign=Feed:+wowriot+(Latest+Wowriot+Blog+Posts +-+Wowriot.Gameriot.com)&gr_i_ni">lots more</a>.
The choice is, post on the forum and give away your identity to ANYONE who wants it, or don't post on the forums at all. This will obviously drive away a huge number of the best posters on the official forums, making them a worse place than before, even without the spam. What happens when you get redirected to a technical forum to ask a question? I know I've had messages from GMs that say, 'please post on the suggestion forum', or error messages that say 'please post on the technical support forum', what will I do then? If I don't want to give away my identity I have no choice but to let my thought go unheard.
As such, I don't see how anyone can agree with this. This goes a LOT LOT deeper than simply stopping spam and trolling on the forums, and in my opinion this could be the start of the fall of WoW if Activision-Blizzard decide to stay on this route.
<a href="http://www.rockpapershotgun.com/2010/07/07/broken-armour-blizzards-forum-folly/#comment-471038">Alec Meer, Rock Paper Shotgun</a>
<a href="http://www.tankspot.com/showthread.php?68744-RealID-Unethical-and-Dangerous">Ciderhelm, Tankspot</a>
<a href="http://www.metafilter.com/93492/But-my-name-really-is-Deathblood-Blackaxe#3171416">Long forum post by Natti </a>
From AltTabbed.com (http://www.alttabbed.com/)
A few days ago, Blizzard made an <a href="http://forums.battle.net/thread.html?topicId=25626109041&sid=3000">announcement</a> that shocked the whole World Of Warcraft community, people who used to play but have quit, and even people who have never played the game before. Everyone seems to have an opinion on this, and almost all of those opinions are massively negative towards the idea.
<blockquote>The first and most significant change is that in the near future, anyone posting or replying to a post on official Blizzard forums will be doing so using their Real ID -- that is, their real-life first and last name -- with the option to also display the name of their primary in-game character alongside it. These changes will go into effect on all StarCraft II forums with the launch of the new community site prior to the July 27 release of the game, with the World of Warcraft site and forums following suit near the launch of Cataclysm. Certain classic forums, including the classic Battle.net forums, will remain unchanged.
The official forums have always been a great place to discuss the latest info on our games, offer ideas and suggestions, and share experiences with other players -- however, the forums have also earned a reputation as a place where flame wars, trolling, and other unpleasantness run wild. Removing the veil of anonymity typical to online dialogue will contribute to a more positive forum environment, promote constructive conversations, and connect the Blizzard community in ways they haven't been connected before. With this change, you'll see blue posters (i.e. Blizzard employees) posting by their real first and last names on our forums as well.</blockquote>
They are trying to justify the move by saying it will make the forums a better place with less trolling and spam, but it's not hard to see that there is a lot, lot more behind this move than what's on the surface. If their sole reasoning was to remove trolling, they could have made you post with your account, and not a specific character (at the moment, you can make a level 1 character and post completely anonymously), if your whole account was being shown, you would be more careful with what you post. Instead,*Blizzard look to be moving into Facebook territory. A move to Facebook integration with Battle.net could make a lot of money for both parties. As everyone knows, Farmville has a lot more players even than World Of Warcraft, and if Blizzard were able to tap into that market they could make a lot of money. It's not long before we see updates on Facebook saying, "John Smith needs one more Primordial Saronite for his Uber Epix chestplate, can anyone help him?", or, "Kate Bloggs has completed 75% of the achievement 'Collect 200 top hats for the homeless', that's amazing!".
However, in doing so, they are risking the security and privacy of all the people who post on the forum. In a community of millions of players, the chances are that some people are going to disagree with you and in very rare (but still possible) cases, want to take it further than just replying on the forum. Giving away your full name makes it incredibly easy to find out where you live, what your email address is, where you work, basically everything and anything about you. If the forums didn't show this information, it would be incredibly hard if not impossible to find out anything, unless you explicitly told the person your email/name. It's almost guaranteed that woman are not going to post on the forums anymore, as many hide behind male avatars so they don't get harassed and stalked online by lonely men. Employers will search for your name when considering you for a job and will find posts by you explaining why this DPS rotation is better than that one, and like it or not they might reject you for it. A fine demonstration of this going wrong was when Blizzard employee Bashiok, the poor fool, posted his real name on the official forums, and an hour later everybody knew his phone number, house, family, and <a href="http://wowriot.gameriot.com/blogs/Americans-are-bad-at-games/Real-Names-on-the-Official-Forums-New-REAL-ID-function?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm _campaign=Feed:+wowriot+(Latest+Wowriot+Blog+Posts +-+Wowriot.Gameriot.com)&gr_i_ni">lots more</a>.
The choice is, post on the forum and give away your identity to ANYONE who wants it, or don't post on the forums at all. This will obviously drive away a huge number of the best posters on the official forums, making them a worse place than before, even without the spam. What happens when you get redirected to a technical forum to ask a question? I know I've had messages from GMs that say, 'please post on the suggestion forum', or error messages that say 'please post on the technical support forum', what will I do then? If I don't want to give away my identity I have no choice but to let my thought go unheard.
As such, I don't see how anyone can agree with this. This goes a LOT LOT deeper than simply stopping spam and trolling on the forums, and in my opinion this could be the start of the fall of WoW if Activision-Blizzard decide to stay on this route.
<a href="http://www.rockpapershotgun.com/2010/07/07/broken-armour-blizzards-forum-folly/#comment-471038">Alec Meer, Rock Paper Shotgun</a>
<a href="http://www.tankspot.com/showthread.php?68744-RealID-Unethical-and-Dangerous">Ciderhelm, Tankspot</a>
<a href="http://www.metafilter.com/93492/But-my-name-really-is-Deathblood-Blackaxe#3171416">Long forum post by Natti </a>
From AltTabbed.com (http://www.alttabbed.com/)