Maybe I'm weird, but I don't really feel like the behavior of someone else who multi-boxes has any real effect on me. It would be like saying "Oh, you play an orc, I play an orc, therefore your behavior reflects on me!"

I mean, I do understand that some boxers are jerks, just like some members of any arbitrary group are jerks. But I'm not, I don't behave like one, and by and large, if someone starts treating me like I'm one because some other boxer was mean to them, I just don't pay any attention to them, and I'm happier for it. People who make the decision to be angry with someone just because that someone shares an arbitrary trait with a group are, frankly, useless to me and not worth my time.

It would be different, I guess, if there were any real danger of multiboxing being banned because there were enough of us, and enough of us behaving badly, to have a significant impact on the ability of other people to enjoy the game, but we are nowhere near that point and really I cannot possibly imagine that we ever would be just because we really are such a VANISHINGLY SMALL part of the population due to the fairly significant investment involved in starting boxing and the learning curve. Most people willing to spend the money and time to learn to do it simply aren't interested in being assholes and putting all of that at risk.

These kinds of threads crop up fairly regularly - people either worrying about how other boxers make them look, or asking other people to regulate their behavior, etc. I'm not saying your idea is a bad one, Candlebox, and by and large I already do help people out just because I'm a nice person, but people ought to do nice things just because they want to and because it's good to be that way, rather than just due to the worry that down the road other people will react badly over something that individual never actually did.