I also created a new email account just for battle.net. They can sell, trade, publish, send all the spam they want to that email. Its just a single keystroke of deletion away.
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I also created a new email account just for battle.net. They can sell, trade, publish, send all the spam they want to that email. Its just a single keystroke of deletion away.
Yeah, but "privacy" is a political buzzword, and can be used to put pressure on companies.
That said, I don't see how it applies here. Blizzard already has your personal information. As for monitoring in-game and even cross-game activity, I don't see the problem here either. OMG, Blizzard is tracking my playtime in order to make their games better! Whatever shall I do???
I wonder what will happen if the Authenticator fails. Million lawsuits will put Blizzard out of business.
?
- You don't need to buy an authenticator if you have a battle.net account.
- You could file a lawsuit, but Blizzard would just laugh at you? If Blizzard decided to shut down their servers today, you couldn't sue them for anything. Best-case you could file a charge-back on your CC for the monthly fee, but even that's iffy.
- The authenticator is by Vasco, not Blizzard.
The authenticator is a 3rd party product, and not related to a battle.net account.
Ahh gocha and the one in Iphone/Ipod does
A lawsuit against Blizzard for the failure of a security device would probably be thrown out. You need to prove damages, and aside from your monthly fee it's unlikely that you'd convince a court or jury that you suffered damages due to the inability to log in to a video game. I'm thinking that there aren't many lawyers who would take a case on the hopes of winning $15 for his client, unless he was working at an hourly rate. In which case you're paying $150-to-$400 an hour to get back $15.