And yep I am sure WOW would cease to exist with out this over reaction. Not that every other MMO ever created hasn't had to deal with and has maned up and dealt with it accordingly without some over the top lawsuit.
Who claimed that WoW would cease to exist without this lawsuit? And what makes this lawsuit an overreaction or over the top? What are you trying to say here? That Blizzard should have no right to protect its investment from people acting in bad faith to damage it?
Well in my over the top example that you apparently took seriously, Blizzard as a company provided a game that by its design automatically creates an uneven playing feild for someone that started out years after the game was released. Now I don't really think they should be sued, however I think Blizzard sueing some one instead of banning them and anyone else using the bot is like taking a sledge hammer to a fly on your foot. Totally uncalled for I am not ok with the precedent this sets.
So you think it's perfectly fine for a guy to write and sell a program that allows people to play World of Warcraft without actually being at the keyboard, and that Blizzard's wrong for trying to put him out of business for publishing unlicensed software that drastically affects the playing experience - not just for the people who are botting, but on the in-game economy as a whole as the items and gold farmed are used in the auction house to alter that economy, with resources that no human player could accumulate.
Or better yet, to inflate prices on the auction house (by buying up everything and relisting it at a higher price) while also selling gold for cash?
It seems to me that you have no idea what's going on here, that you're objecting to this just because it's a lawsuit without also considering the effect that botting has on WoW as a whole.
Also, the uneven playing field isn't actionable -
everyone has to start at first level, and Blizzard has made it easy to get to 70th level, to get access to epic gear without needing to raid for it. It's not even remotely comparable. It's humanly possible to level up to 70 in a short period of time, get good gear, get mounts, etc. What's not humanly possible is to compete with bots. It's an entirely different kind of uneven playing field. It'd be like if you were in a foot race and one guy was riding a motorcycle.
Uh yeah and I take it you have actually surveyed the multimillion WOW users to see if they have actually even heard of this bot! My bet is the vast majority would have no clue what you are talking about if you asked them, and I would even go so far as to say few of the millions would truely care.
Then you don't know the game well. I would say most players are aware of gold farmers and botters and report them as soon as they see them. You can find complaint threads about them in server forums, in the customer service forum, in the general forum. If you join any active guild, you'll find guildmembers talking about them.
While it is possible (even probable) that many players are not directly aware of the bot itself, they're aware of botting in general. Many are also aware of the impact this has on WoW's economics. You're trying to appeal to the idea that most subscribers don't know about bots, and thus bots aren't really a problem - but no reasonable person would accept that as an argument even if it were true - ignorance of harm, even if the majority are ignorant of that harm, does not mean that no harm has been caused. In this case, Blizzard has access to datamining tools and Warden that can at least give an idea of how many people are using bots, what they're doing with those bots, and how much of that is going into the economy and warping it. Even if individual players don't notice, Blizzard still has hard numbers.
So why do you think it's wrong for a corporation that's been harmed to file a lawsuit? Why do you imply that the harm should potentially
destroy their business before it's okay to file that lawsuit?