I am going to give you a little lecture on how the Xbox Live Enforcement Team deal with people who violate the Xbox Live TOU (Terms Of Use)/COC (Code Of Conduct).
The enforcement team use a program called Vulcan, based on the mythology at http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Vulcan_(mythology)&oldid=383360151
There are a lot of myths about the Xbox Live enforcement team, and I'm going to clear a few of them. The system is NOT automated, none of it is, everything is dealt by one enforcement agent who will see your complaint, see if evidence backs up the complaint and then ban the user if necessary. Another myth is that if you get a certain number of complaints on your profile you're going to get banned, this is also NOT true, evidence has to be backed up with the complaint so that a ban can be permitted. The system is very simple, it goes in these steps:
The next tool they use is the Duplicate Preventer. Obviously if you have something disgusting in your motto, location, name or bio and you have been playing on Xbox Live for a good few hours then you're likely to have a good couple or more complaints on that account. This tool collapses all complaints into one single complaints so it is easier for the enforcement agent to deal with. They also do take it into mind that it was also YOU that filed the complaint, so if the complaint was valid your accuracy will still go up.
The last tool they use is called Instant. The enforcement team don't just sit at a desk all day and deal with complaints, they also play games whilst they work. So if they come across a bad gamertag, or foul/abusive trash talking then with Instant, this allows them to simply pop in the gamertag, enter a few keys of the reason, then they're banned. That simple.
There is NO such thing as a ban wave, if thousands of people have got banned at once then this is probably because they have updated Vulcan with a handy new tool and they have found thousands of violators with this new tool. Seen as there are thousands of people out there getting banned a day you will get a big number of people saying "OMG I GOT BANNED FOR NO R3A5ON!". 99.9% of the time you did get banned for violating the TOU/COC, however, because it is all done by enforcement agents there is a chance that they can make a mistake but the probability is very low.
The enforcement team use a program called Vulcan, based on the mythology at http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Vulcan_(mythology)&oldid=383360151
There are a lot of myths about the Xbox Live enforcement team, and I'm going to clear a few of them. The system is NOT automated, none of it is, everything is dealt by one enforcement agent who will see your complaint, see if evidence backs up the complaint and then ban the user if necessary. Another myth is that if you get a certain number of complaints on your profile you're going to get banned, this is also NOT true, evidence has to be backed up with the complaint so that a ban can be permitted. The system is very simple, it goes in these steps:
- Member violates TOU/COC
- Another member witnesses the violation
- That member files a complaint
- The complaint is viewed by an enforcement agent
- They determine the accuracy of the complaints and either leave or ban the user
- Member violates TOU/COC
The next tool they use is the Duplicate Preventer. Obviously if you have something disgusting in your motto, location, name or bio and you have been playing on Xbox Live for a good few hours then you're likely to have a good couple or more complaints on that account. This tool collapses all complaints into one single complaints so it is easier for the enforcement agent to deal with. They also do take it into mind that it was also YOU that filed the complaint, so if the complaint was valid your accuracy will still go up.
The last tool they use is called Instant. The enforcement team don't just sit at a desk all day and deal with complaints, they also play games whilst they work. So if they come across a bad gamertag, or foul/abusive trash talking then with Instant, this allows them to simply pop in the gamertag, enter a few keys of the reason, then they're banned. That simple.
There is NO such thing as a ban wave, if thousands of people have got banned at once then this is probably because they have updated Vulcan with a handy new tool and they have found thousands of violators with this new tool. Seen as there are thousands of people out there getting banned a day you will get a big number of people saying "OMG I GOT BANNED FOR NO R3A5ON!". 99.9% of the time you did get banned for violating the TOU/COC, however, because it is all done by enforcement agents there is a chance that they can make a mistake but the probability is very low.
If you want to make sure that you don't violate the TOU/COC then read it, instead of clicking I accept without reading it.
~ Vini Vici ~