Rack Fu

Tech questions and answers, video game stuff.

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jiminphilly
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Rack Fu

Post by jiminphilly »

I am wondering how the admin and operator of this site
www.smirl.com, as well as other other admins of smiliar type sites are able to function, without fear of prosecution for openly providing 3rd party applications that alter the coding of games, specially one owned by the US DOD.

If you register on the site you'll see that this site also provides downloadable programs that enable you to use aimbots on BF2 and other games too.

Those who agree to term of service on AA agree to the Army's EULA which seems to prohibit users from messing with the codes among other things.. Nonetheless it is done and with great frequency. The developers of AA are well aware of this site and like BF2 they rely on punkbuster to catch those who are cheating.
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Donovan
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Post by Donovan »

Sounds like a mod community to me. Most games have them, and the developers usually support them. I doubt the DOD is worried, nor should they be.
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Rack Fu
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Post by Rack Fu »

Registrant:
http://www.SMiRL.com iNC.
4232 Lusk Dr
Sacramento, CA 95864
US

Domain name: SMIRL.COM

Administrative Contact:
Smirl, Martin *******@smirl.com
4232 Lusk Dr
Sacramento, CA 95864
US
(207) 321-5063 Fax: (207) 321-5063

Technical Contact:
SMiRL, HackerX *******@SMiRL.com
4232 Lusk Dr.
Sacramento, CA 95864
US
(207) 321-5063 Fax: (207) 321-5063



Registration Service Provider:
SureWest Broadband, *******@surewest.net
(916) 772-5000
http://www.surewest.net
This company may be contacted for domain login/passwords,
DNS/Nameserver changes, and general domain support questions.


Registrar of Record: TUCOWS, INC.
Record last updated on 26-Mar-2006.
Record expires on 10-Jul-2006.
Record created on 10-Jul-2004.

Domain servers in listed order:
DNS1.MIDPHASE.COM 205.234.202.61
DNS2.MIDPHASE.COM 205.234.190.253
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Rack Fu
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Re: Rack Fu

Post by Rack Fu »

jiminphilly wrote:I am wondering how the admin and operator of this site
www.smirl.com, as well as other other admins of smiliar type sites are able to function, without fear of prosecution for openly providing 3rd party applications that alter the coding of games, specially one owned by the US DOD.

If you register on the site you'll see that this site also provides downloadable programs that enable you to use aimbots on BF2 and other games too.

Those who agree to term of service on AA agree to the Army's EULA which seems to prohibit users from messing with the codes among other things.. Nonetheless it is done and with great frequency. The developers of AA are well aware of this site and like BF2 they rely on punkbuster to catch those who are cheating.
This is actually a civil issue and not criminal.
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Rack Fu
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Post by Rack Fu »

Donovan wrote:Sounds like a mod community to me. Most games have them, and the developers usually support them. I doubt the DOD is worried, nor should they be.
The developers don't support cheating, which that site is all about. Very different from mods.
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Donovan
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Post by Donovan »

Yeah, you're right. I didn't read the part about aimbots.

I've never understood why losers like this need to cheat to enjoy online games. Thank God for Punkbuster so that the rest of us can play fair and have fun.
jiminphilly
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Post by jiminphilly »

Donovan wrote:Yeah, you're right. I didn't read the part about aimbots.

I've never understood why losers like this need to cheat to enjoy online games. Thank God for Punkbuster so that the rest of us can play fair and have fun.

There a lot of private 'hacks' still out there that PB has not caught. Apparently there is more cheating going on in BF2 than any other online game.

Fu you said it's more of a civil issue than criminal. Is this because the DOD does not want to spend the $$ chasing down punks like the owner of that site? I would tend to agree with their decision but I'm just wondering.

On aaotracker.com there is at least 1 thread a day about cheaters and script kiddies.
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Rack Fu
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Post by Rack Fu »

jiminphilly wrote:
Fu you said it's more of a civil issue than criminal. Is this because the DOD does not want to spend the $$ chasing down punks like the owner of that site? I would tend to agree with their decision but I'm just wondering.
No, it's just not a crime to alter coded software like that via a 3rd party application. The EULA is a civil contract for all intents and purposes. The developers could sue the people behind those sites and applications if they saw fit.

Illegal reproduction/distribution is a crime as is copyright/patent infringement, theft of trade secrets and stuff like that. What they're doing is not criminal.
jiminphilly
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Post by jiminphilly »

Rack Fu wrote:
jiminphilly wrote:
Fu you said it's more of a civil issue than criminal. Is this because the DOD does not want to spend the $$ chasing down punks like the owner of that site? I would tend to agree with their decision but I'm just wondering.
No, it's just not a crime to alter coded software like that via a 3rd party application. The EULA is a civil contract for all intents and purposes. The developers could sue the people behind those sites and applications if they saw fit.

Illegal reproduction/distribution is a crime as is copyright/patent infringement, theft of trade secrets and stuff like that. What they're doing is not criminal.
I didn't know that. Thanks.
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