So I haven't read through the whole thread but are we leaning towards enyo being the cause of recent bans. Because I used it along with simcraft botbase almost exclusively for raids and got 6 minthed.
No, that's not the conclusion actually. Most of the common denominators in the ban reports have been 1 or more of the following, with a large majority of the banned users also having used other riskier bots in the past (verified by their post histories).
1. Use of *****ed Honorbuddy software that didn't provide the same Tripwire protection as legitimate copies during the event.
2. Use of AFK Garrison botbases/plugins/profiles
3. Use of BG/Ashran/Gathering AFK botbases/farming/profiles
4. Potential use of Input to Chat and/or excessive, patterned Click to Move enabled in botbases (such as Enyo perhaps)
This is just a list of the most common denominators across the 60 or so reports from the US over the last few days. Keep in mind that's 60 out of thousands. That's why the HB staff keeps saying this wasn't a wave. It was a ripple, and it's important to also note that bans are NOT always the result of botting practices caught 1, 2, or even 3 days prior. A very large number of bans are the result of accounts being flagged weeks or even months prior due to botting practices that could have been quite different than the casual use of a CR in the days preceding. Blizzard has been known to tag accounts in this fashion, such as with the PQR banwave (which was more of a Tsunami actually, with reports of 300-500k accounts perma-banned).
In most of this week's cases however, the banned users who've stated that they "only used a CR w/ Enyo" were found to have posted in the riskier AFK botbase/profile threads weeks or months prior. In short, it's believed that a lot of people most likely got flagged for stupidity long before their "CR or Enyo got them banned." That being said, I do hope the updated Enyo gets approved soon, but it's safer to wait until that time to use it if you ask me. I'd want them to have whatever time they need to make sure it's ready.