
All your fault
Software giant Microsoft has come up with a clever
solution to a software flaw on its Xbox Live online service. Rather than fixing the mistake in the software of Call of
Duty Modern Warfare 2, Redmond has decided that it is better to punish the
users who exploit it.
Stephen Toulouse, the director for policy and enforcement
for the Xbox 360's Xbox Live online service said that players who abuse the
"javelin missile exploit" will be banned from the entire Xbox Live
service. In some cases it may even make a permanent if the exploit
is badly abused.
The javeline exploit is a glitch in the online
multiplayer. You switch to the javeline missile launcher after
"cooking" a semtex grenade by holding down the grenade throw button.
This locks the player's actions. When the player dies the javeline missile explodes,
killing all enemies within an enormous radius.
In the original Call of Duty Modern Warfare the
"martyrdom" perk, which dropped a grenade when the player dies. The
javeline exploit creates a similar outcome, except the explosion radius is the
same size as a javeline missile, which blows up a larger chunk of screen.
The news groups are packed with angry gamers, although
Xbox Live terms of use does clearly state that abusing exploits, glitches,
cheats, or unauthorized mods will not be tolerated.
Still it strikes us as a strange way of dealing
with a problem. Why not fix the software glitch. We would have thought that
punishing gamers was a lot harder to do. Imagine every time there was a
security flaw in Windows, Redmond went after the pirate instead of fixing it.