Welcome to the Second Life Forums Archive

These forums are CLOSED. Please visit the new forums HERE

This is Insane ... PLZ read !!!!!

Zephria Zapata
Anit-Gorean & Slave
Join date: 7 Apr 2004
Posts: 299
05-01-2005 09:55
VIRTUAL LIFE .... ENDS UP IN REALS DANG HOW FAR WILL IT GO
saD WHEN SOME ONE IS REALS DIES :((((
Online gamer killed over cybertheft
Chinese player stabbed to death after virtual weapon sold

BEIJING - A Shanghai online game player stabbed to death a competitor who sold his cyber-sword, the China Daily said on Wednesday, creating a dilemma in China where no law exists for the ownership of virtual weapons.
advertisement

Qiu Chengwei, 41, stabbed competitor Zhu Caoyuan repeatedly in the chest after he was told Zhu had sold his "dragon sabre," used in the popular online game, "Legend of Mir 3", the newspaper said a Shanghai court was told on Tuesday.

"Legend of Mir 3" features heroes and villains, sorcerers and warriors, many of whom wield enormous swords.


Qiu and a friend jointly won their weapon last February, and lent it to Zhu who then sold it for 7,200 yuan (US$870), the newspaper said.

Qui went to the police to report the "theft" but was told the weapon was not real property protected by law.

"Zhu promised to hand over the cash but an angry Qui lost patience and attacked Zhu at his home, stabbing him in the left chest with great force and killing him," the court was told.

Virtual worlds wind up in real world's courts




The newspaper did not specify the charge against Qiu but said he had given himself up to police and already pleaded guilty to "intentional injury".

No verdict has been announced.

More and more online gamers were seeking justice through the courts over stolen weapons and credits, the newspaper said.

"The armor and swords in games should be deemed as private property as players have to spend money and time for them," Wang Zongyu, an associate law professor at Beijing's Renmin University of China, was quoted as saying.

But other experts are calling for caution. "The 'assets' of one player could mean nothing to others as they are by nature just data created by game providers," a lawyer for a Shanghai-based Internet game company was quoted as saying.
Olvoll McHenry
Registered User
Join date: 24 Jun 2004
Posts: 26
05-01-2005 13:03
From: someone
Qiu and a friend jointly won their weapon last February, and lent it to Zhu who then sold it for 7,200 yuan (US$870), the newspaper said.


That is the only truly shocking part. 7,200 yuan for a weapon in an online game ... thats about 5 years wages for a low-income Chinese person iirc. And why did he lend it to Mr. Zhu anyway? If anything, he should have been stabbing himself for being such a fool.
Lo Jacobs
Awesome Possum
Join date: 28 May 2004
Posts: 2,734
05-01-2005 13:05
Well, there was that guy in 2002 who killed himself after becoming addicted to Everquest (though they still don't know EXACTLY why he killed himself) ...

They've been talking about putting warnings on the boxes about the addictive nature of MMORPGs, which I think would be hard to take seriously.
_____________________
http://churchofluxe.com/Luster :o
Ursula Madison
Chewbacca is my co-pilot
Join date: 31 Jul 2004
Posts: 713
05-01-2005 13:31
From: Lo Jacobs
Well, there was that guy in 2002 who killed himself after becoming addicted to Everquest (though they still don't know EXACTLY why he killed himself) ...

They've been talking about putting warnings on the boxes about the addictive nature of MMORPGs, which I think would be hard to take seriously.

Oh, I dunno... the ones on cigarette packs have been working fantastically. :rolleyes:
_____________________
"Huh... did everything just taste purple for a second?" -- Philip J. Fry