Third, the portion you highlighted has nothing to do with the claims you are making about Inner Space. Inner Space does not intercept, mine, or otherwise collect information from World of Warcraft. The section you are highlighting has to do with packet sniffing (which Inner Space does not do), or reading WoW memory for purposes of collecting data about the game (which Inner Space does not do). For example, they do not want you running a program that collects information on all of the nearby mobs for you to determine if there is a rare mob for you to go kill (which people did in EverQuest all the time). If the claim you were making about Inner Space being illegal for residing in-process were true, then WinEQ, WinEQ 2, and a multitude of other software including software promoted on dual-boxing.com would be illegal.
A) WoWGlider case was about the copying and/or mining of WoW's memoryspace. Case could set quite a precedent in the Digital Rights area, that copying memory is an abuse of copyright, but whatever, thats a different topic.

You can defend your product as much as you want, however it was DESIGNED for bottling software (lol). Your "platform" was designed to live in the process space as to avoid detection. (I'm sure I could find many a posts for this, but you're not worth my time).

B) Question for you then buddy, Why live in the WoW memory space if not for allowing access to the memory of WoW? Overlays and other applications are perfectly able to run in other processes (see: fraps).

C) Just because they aren't SUEING you, doesn't mean you wont' get banned for using your shady ass software.
INDEPENDENT of the ability to sniff memory... Blizz can ban you for whatever they want, even without a reason. Your software was KNOWN to be associated with WoWGlider. I'm pretty sure thats a bit to close for comfort, no?


Food for thought