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The Courts Games

US Judge Blocks Programs Letting 'Grand Theft Auto' Players 'Cheat' (reuters.com) 112

A federal judge has awarded Take-Two Interactive Software, the maker of the "Grand Theft Auto" series, a preliminary injunction to stop a Georgia man from selling programs that it said helps players cheat at the best-selling video game. From a report: Take-Two had accused David Zipperer of selling computer programs called Menyoo and Absolute that let users of the "Grand Theft Auto V" multiplayer feature Grand Theft Auto Online cheat by altering the game for their own benefit, or "griefing" other players by altering their game play without permission. U.S. District Judge Louis Stanton in Manhattan said Take-Two was likely to show that Zipperer infringed its "Grand Theft Auto V" copyright, and that his programs would cause irreparable harm to its sales and reputation by discouraging users from buying its video games.
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US Judge Blocks Programs Letting 'Grand Theft Auto' Players 'Cheat'

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  • by Anonymous Coward

    It teaches bad values. In these trying times, we need to rid ourselves of things that set bad examples.

  • GTA 5 is a pretty amazing game aside from the award winning bad UI (it literally got awards for being so bad). You can go anywhere, do anything you'd expect in a city. The sheer number of things to do is mind blowing.

    However... it's taken them this long to act on the cheaters beyond simple bans. Proof being
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nvJ_haYDh_w (from 4 years ago)

    feel free to look.

    The game is virtually unplayable when hackers get in the game

  • by Anonymous Coward

    By cheating, you're infringing on their copyright. This is why you don't own games anymore, and just get a license to play it.

  • Very disappointing (Score:5, Insightful)

    by mysidia ( 191772 ) on Friday August 17, 2018 @03:09PM (#57145892)

    Both of these programs Menyoo and AbsoluteMenu are used in single player and have many legitimate and creative purposes.
    The issue with people abusing these with hacked clients to break multiplayer rules on GTA's own servers shouldn't be able to prevent these 3rd party tools that have many legitimate and awesome uses from existing....

    Also, a Publisher of video game software doesn't have any right to prevent people from altering the game or modifying their game playing experience for personal entertainment; Assuming the person doesn't use the game with an online service to cheat, but the recourse for cheating is to file suit against the person cheating on their service or ban them from their server -- not to prevent the distribution of tools.

    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • To be fair, these kinds of mods will (and do) still exist. Just don't attempt to sell them and not expect to run into the same legal troubles.

    • by rtb61 ( 674572 )

      They compete against cheats sold by the company. They basically sell game funny money to buy a competitive advantage and degame the game, basically in real world game terms in game cheats to give substantial advantge. The question is whether or not this is fair or unfair. The company is selling a game. The company is selling cheats, it claims are legal. Other companies sell cheats, more competitive cheats. Is not the user entitled to choose the most competitive cheats, once they have bought the game. That w

  • by rsilvergun ( 571051 ) on Friday August 17, 2018 @03:15PM (#57145906)
    I would have thought this was settled 2 decades ago when Nintendo sued Galoob over the Game Genie and lost (with the classic line "If I buy a car does the manufacturer have a right to tell me I can't paint it blue?").

    I'm aware the dynamics change with micro transactions & online play, but let's put it another way: Does Microsoft have a right to ban you from using Greasemonkey with office 365 because they might want to sell you a plugin that does what you used to with a Greasemonkey script?
    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by SirSlud ( 67381 )

      It's an entirely different situation and impact on the producer of the software when what an individual does with the 3rd party product affects other purchasers of the software who don't use it. Especially if it affects them in negative ways that may cause them to consider terminating their consumer relationship with that producer.

      • by Greyfox ( 87712 )
        I guess it mostly boils down to the legality of the EULA, but in this case it's easy enough to argue that the programs in question do economic harm to the company and might also violate some criminal statutes WRT unauthorized access to computer networks and copyright derivative works. That's a whole lot of something to throw at the wall to see what sticks. Violating the EULA of a single player game and possibly even distributing code to do the same might have a different answer, although you can always pain
    • by Actually, I do RTFA ( 1058596 ) on Friday August 17, 2018 @03:23PM (#57145960)

      The court's not sure it should care. It's a preliminary injunction, until the case is complete. Which means the judge was convinced (to some level) that Take-Two could win the case and that it would suffer "irreparable harm" (in driving people off the online game) while the case happened.

      Now, I have no idea if Take-Two is liable for damages the injunction causes if they lose the case.

    • by MobyDisk ( 75490 )

      You should be right, except a combination of the DMCA + EULAs completely reversed all that. You can thank Blizzard over and over again for their part of it:
      Blizzard -vs- Glider [slashdot.org]
      Blizzard -vs- Ceiling software [slashdot.org]
      Blizzard again [slashdot.org]
      Blizzard again, this time it's Overwatch [slashdot.org]

      I hate cheaters too. But Blizzard and their lawyers are the biggest cheaters of all. They would happily take away rights from their own families if it meant they could make a buck.

      • That's terrible. Why wouldn't you want your online game overrun with gold farming bots and other assorted cheating griefers. Any players that don't like it should cry moar and play Care Bears Online.

        • by MobyDisk ( 75490 )

          Clearly you don't understand the conversation. No one in this thread is arguing that gold farming bots or griefing should be permitted. The argument is that the courts are applying the wrong section of law (copyright, instead of terms-of-service contract violations), and the consequence is that they are taking away legitimate tools from the white hat hacking community and the broader software development community. The courts are broadening copyright to the point where fair use is being eluded. It is af

  • I don't think the guy should be allowed to do what he's doing, but nobody has made GTA online more unplayable than the developers. Fuck that p2w garbage, I hope they lose money.
  • Take-Two had accused David Zipperer of selling computer programs called Menyoo and Absolute that let users of the "Grand Theft Auto V" multiplayer feature Grand Theft Auto Online cheat...[f]or "griefing" other players by altering their game play without permission

    So someone is getting in trouble for hijacking other players (game sessions) in a game called Grand Theft Auto?

    • by SirSlud ( 67381 )

      Oh man, and get a load of this, people play games in which they get shot don't actually want to get shot in real life! HYPOCRITE MUCH, AMIRITE

  • At least something is being done; even though it seems amusing, having millions in cash (or cars) spawned on top of you at least once during every play session is why I stopped playing it.
  • that line of thinking can be used to lock out repair at non dealer shops.

    With copyright bs, and that can would cause irreparable harm to its sales and reputation by discouraging users from buying service and repair at dealer.

  • I'm not sure why the ruling was based on 'copyright infringement and causing irreperable harm to revenue'. This kind of cheating should fall under laws regarding computer crime.

    Not this doesn't include things like modding or cheating in a single player game. The problem is that this is being done with devices not owned by the user - game servers, other players games. And this guy is distributing that software enabling it. Regardless of whether you love or hate this particular game - it's not the only gam
  • Fucking Copyrights, how do they work? [youtube.com]

    I imagine this phrase goes through Judge Stanton's head at the start of every IP case.

  • I think it's a bit of a waste of court resources to be forced to deal with cheaters in video games.

    But whatever, cheating in online games ruins the game for everyone, so I'm all for courts putting their foot down on this. I know in my own case, I pretty much don't play any online games anymore, because of griefing, cheating and generally barbaric manners.

    Enforcing this ruling could be problematic though. It's notoriously difficult to take anything off the internet.

  • by master_p ( 608214 ) on Friday August 17, 2018 @05:20PM (#57146712)

    Hacks shouldn't happen in online games. The server should do all the checks and take all the decisions. If a hacked client can ruin other clients' games, then the online game is severely ill-designed.

    • I imagine there had to be some kind of checks in balances in place - Rockstar isn't exactly some clueless indie making their first game. David would have needed to take the time to figure out and make an exploit to work around whatever was in place to prevent tampering online for his tool to be able to do what it does online. If David had instead say, taken the time to figure out the checks and balances on a banks financial servers, and then sold a tool that let you 'mod' that server - we've had a very diff
      • A lot of Chinese, Korean and Japanese MMOs take some incredibly strong measures to try (and fail) to prevent players from hacking. Sony's Rootkit is a joke compared to what some of these anti-hacking programs can do.

        Honestly, them barring David from selling his tool, isn't going to stop anyone from hacking GTA - this isn't even a temporary victory, there's plenty of alternative tools available just a google search away. One even makes you Darth Vader so you can "make others suffer, while you stay safe" ap
    • If a hacked client can ruin other clients' games, then the online game is severely ill-designed.

      If only it were that simple. Yes, many games are poorly designed. No, even the best designs will have issues with ill-behaved clients.

  • Grand Cheat Loading V FTL

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