You can view the page at http://www.thebuddyforum.com/content.php?r=42-Bossland-vs-Blizzard
lol!!!this is interesting xD
But doesn't the box you buy wow from say that a battle.net account is required which implies you must agree to all terms and conditions that are needed to register a battle.net account? And the battle.net ToS and EULA includes WoW's. But it is not directly printed on the box that you must accept a ToS and EULA
Its a game as every one else here say becuse they advertise it as a game so if they against the odds willpretty sure it was found in glider v blizzard that when you buy the game, youre not actually owning a copy of the game, rather you're owning a "license" to play and that license is subject to whatever ToS blizzard makes, and without notice.
This does not seem to be going any where if u ask me
I am sure blizzard have alot up there sleeve to deal with cases like botting when they are ready
I posted a while back on a few things
Think of this going by blizzard your bot gets used for by cheaters low lifes computer hackers/aka gold sellers....NOW UNDER COMPUTER LAW THE TERM COMPUTER HACKING is where you do not have permission to access information on a owners computer...So you may want to be careful you know because computer laws could apply here
Your point is irrelevant to this situation, Creating a program that automates game play doesn't touch the Blizzards systems, They are not hacking any files. To get the world information they ripped apart a copy of the game they bought and manipulated it to work in their way. They didn't break any security protocols or put their foot across blizzard servers to get the program to work. The only thing they manipulated was making the bot undetectable by warden, Which is also on YOUR system. You installed it. Your not *****ing blizzard your hacking your self.