Want to read Slashdot from your mobile device? Point it at m.slashdot.org and keep reading!

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Role Playing (Games)

Real World Anger Affecting MMOG Reality? 46

We reported late last week that FFXI was under a DDOS attack. The Japanese origin of the title may be the reason for the attack, as Ludonauts asks the question of whether chinese crackers may attacking the game because of political frustration. From the article: "Discussion on the Allakhazam forum points the attack at Chinese protesters angry about the deletion of references to Japanese war atrocities from history textbooks: the DDOS attacks began on April 9, the same day as the protests in China. In FFXI, this issue is linked to the question of 'gil-sellers,' players who farm in-game resources for real-world cash, who in FFXI are usually characterized as Chinese: many who are suspected of being gil-sellers have placed comments in their searchable information fields like 'Resisting all Japanese goods, long live the People's Republic of China.'" Commentary available from game girl advance, Broken Toys, and Terra Nova.
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Real World Anger Affecting MMOG Reality?

Comments Filter:
  • From TFA (Score:3, Funny)

    by kryogen1x ( 838672 ) on Tuesday April 19, 2005 @10:23PM (#12288717)
    It is interesting, for example, that no matter how angry the world gets at US foreign policy, there is no campaign to take down Xbox Live.

    Isn't it obvious? Al Qaeda just loves playing Halo 2.

    • "Isn't it obvious? Al Qaeda just loves playing Halo 2."

      Heh. Seriously, though, it seems that XBOX Live would be a crappy service to disrupt if you're mad at the USA. I'm not sure how I'd register a complaint about that, but XBOX Live seems like a wasted effort. Hmm.. how about the IRS's site close to the 15th? Heh.
      • Re:From TFA (Score:5, Funny)

        by fuzzybunny ( 112938 ) on Tuesday April 19, 2005 @11:59PM (#12289410) Homepage Journal
        Well, I think you're right--all of a sudden you'd have millions of pissed off gamers taking a quick glance at their PC, then looking again, and thinking, "hmm, maybe America's Army isn't such a bad bet after all."

        All the army guys would have to do then is promise the XBOX Live outage victims that they could play with something like this [utexas.edu], or this [engadget.com], or these [wired.com] or even better, one of these [defensereview.com]

        Conveniently leave out the part about pushups and getting yelled/shot at and you'd have hordes of HALO fanatics breaking down your doors to come join up. So hey, Al Qaeda, if you're reading this, better leave XBOX Live alone!
      • Re:From TFA (Score:4, Insightful)

        by ikkonoishi ( 674762 ) on Wednesday April 20, 2005 @01:22AM (#12289847) Journal
        Unlike a large portion of China, most Al Qaeda members are not bored college students who spend their free time playing MMORPGs.
    • I thought the whole "destroy all sentient life in the galaxy" would raise eyebrows in Al Qaeda.
  • Hmm.... (Score:3, Interesting)

    by briankoenig ( 853681 ) on Tuesday April 19, 2005 @10:28PM (#12288749)
    Gamegirladvance must be friends with one of the admins to have so many links to articles in such a short time period!

    Especially when the article in question is just a copy/paste of the Terra Nova article, with only two typo-ridden sentences as commentary tacked on the end.

    As for the DDOS attacks being linked to national unrest, it seems like a rather odd way to vent frustration and anger about the China/Japan situation. I can't imagine anyone in power noticing something as trivial as gameservers in the current situation, and the effect on the average Japanese user is slight at best.

    • Re:Hmm.... (Score:3, Insightful)

      by identity0 ( 77976 )
      As for the DDOS attacks being linked to national unrest, it seems like a rather odd way to vent frustration and anger about the China/Japan situation. I can't imagine anyone in power noticing something as trivial as gameservers in the current situation, and the effect on the average Japanese user is slight at best.

      Yeah, it's not like people would do stupid things like hacking Al-Jazeera [slashdot.org] out of pure nationalistic spite.
  • Hmm. (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Mandoric ( 55703 ) <mandoric@sover.net> on Tuesday April 19, 2005 @10:50PM (#12288949) Homepage
    While it's certainly possible that Chinese groups are behind the attacks, it's unlikely that the (over-maligned to begin with) RMTs are. The biggest companies are based out of Hong Kong, which due to its heavy trade involvement isn't seeing as heavy anti-Japanese sentiment; in any case, given that their dinner and bed rely on maintaining a brisk sales pace, bringing the game down would be counterproductive.
  • by MMaestro ( 585010 ) on Tuesday April 19, 2005 @11:26PM (#12289228)
    The Japanese are attempting to impose their imperialistic reign over China once again! Let us rise together and fight off the evil aggressors as our ancestors have done before!

    /sarcasm

    Its humorous to see how a lot of posts here on /. seem to have this idea that the Chinese are seriously informed about what they're 'fighting' (read: rioting) for. China is still a Communist country with a censored press and is subjected to a censored internet (something few outsiders could probably comprehend). Regardless of what it looks like from the outside, people need to think of what the average Chinese citizen sees from the inside. Once you do that, its not TOO much more difficult to see why the Chinese would/are doing such things.

    Japan is attempting to join the security council at the U.N. China is the only MAJOR U.N. player in Asia (Russia doesn't count since its focused domestically and to its southwest right now). Throw in political (North Korea), economic (U.N. sanctions on China for human rights issues to cut competition?) and historical (WWII fears) and you have a nasty case of mass backlash.

    • "Once you do that, its not TOO much more difficult to see why the Chinese would/are doing such things."

      Except this has gotten out of Beijing's control. Protesting is one thing, but rioting is something completely different and not something the Beloved Party would want anything to do with right now. They're in enough trouble with their recent legislation against Taiwan that they don't need to be damaging relations with Japan quite to this degree right now.
  • Just goes to show... (Score:3, Interesting)

    by Short Circuit ( 52384 ) * <mikemol@gmail.com> on Tuesday April 19, 2005 @11:56PM (#12289390) Homepage Journal
    ...how globalizing the Internet can be. It can take localized conflicts and expand them to influence a much wider area.

    This suggests that decentralization of popular services is even more important than ever before, both on a technical and social level. If someone has a monopoly on something that has a widely-spread fan base, and they give it a common address (DNS, IP, postal, conceptual, whatever), then individuals or groups from anywhere can disrupt that product everywhere.

    I wonder how this is going to drive uptime-maintaining technology for MMORPGs. My impression is that existing systems aren't very good at failover. Virtualizing server systems and spreading them over clusters in a failover-compatible way would be a good start.
  • Background Knowledge (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Prien715 ( 251944 ) <agnosticpope@@@gmail...com> on Wednesday April 20, 2005 @12:48AM (#12289671) Journal
    If anyone wants further news about this, I found this [npr.org] to be interesting.

    Basically, during the fall of one of the latter Chinese dynasties, protests against Japan were encouraged as the people had less faith in Confucianism and thus the emperor thought their anger against the Japanese could be used to rally national unity. In the same way, perhaps the current government's ideological grip is being lost as a communist economy is giving way to a much more open-market one and thus China again looks for a way to rally national unity.

    Some could even argue that allowing for free forms of expression against the Japanese government could lessen desire for other, less desirable, open demonstrations (ala Tienaman Square).
    • At times of desperation this is not unussual in any country, they tend to find someone to demonize.
      for a short time it ussualy works aswell but it has always been a bad idea for the rulling party to support and promote it for their own gains and facists tend to ldo it to get in to power

      Hittler userd the jewish people
      Saddam used the kurdish people
      people who are Communist tend(ed) to be demonised in the USA ,atleast during the cold war
      After the tragedy upon the Twin towers(and a few other incidents) , the ar
    • So you think all these anger and riots happens because governments manipulated a human trait? It's all about rallying for national unity? On top of that the current uprising is from the public, and the government actually asks the public to calm down and even go further as to ban some rally in some cities (in Beijing when a Japanese minister was visiting). What if your nation is invaded and robbed, your men massacred or used for chem/bio weapon guinea-pigs, women kidnapped, raped and used as sex slaves f
  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • Well i don't have any of knowing if this story is correct , to me its just unfounded gossip at best and at worst propaganda.
      We would need some hard evidence to back up these claims if we are to take them seriously.

      basicaly right now by all the evidence you have , there is as much proof to think that sony did it to win back players to everquest lost in the japanese market or some or competitor.

      This right now is just an unsubstantiated rumor and a conspiracy theory .
  • Pot vs Kettle (Score:5, Informative)

    by sockdoll ( 828227 ) <sockdoll@hotmail.com> on Wednesday April 20, 2005 @08:29AM (#12291238) Journal
    Two nights ago at dinner my 12 year old son asked me that, if the Chinese were so upset about missing accounts of Japanese atrocities against the Chinese in Japanese textbooks, were they (the Chinese) reporting their own atrocities against their own people in their own textbooks? A basic study of the events leading up to the Cultural Revolution, and on through the events at Tiananmen Square in 1989, provides plenty of material for writing about domestic Chinese atrocities.

    While living in Taiwan in the late Eighties I had to spend a few hours in a cramped air raid shelter in downtown Taipei, because the authorities there felt that the Communists might use the protests at Tiananmen Square as an excuse to move against the student's supporters on Taiwan, and retake the island.
    • All you said is true. But for one moment, do you think the general public in China, thought it was right thing to do during Tiananmen Square? It is not the government who stir up the uprising but the general public. As I mentioned in the above posting the government actually asked public to calm down and even ban protests in cities. Your son's concern is certainly 100% valid and legitimate. But because their government let Tiananmen Square happened and have not apologized for it, that DOES NOT JUSTIFY
  • It's funny, I don't remember seeing any anti-Japan or anti-Western sentiment from the Chinese in FFXI.

    Monday nights we have our usual "why the Chinese government sucks and all its officials must be tortured to death in public" seminars in Lower Jeuno. There's always active participation in these from all sides, although our friends from the PRC generally display a level of bloodlust towards their own rulers that we in the west find incomprehensible. We really think they enjoy being able to hear our account

Love may laugh at locksmiths, but he has a profound respect for money bags. -- Sidney Paternoster, "The Folly of the Wise"

Working...