News - Warzone Streamers Permanently Banned From Ranked
Coming in that bands have been permanently banned in AIO received a permanent ban last night. This is a developing story's legal action. We will keep you updated on all the latest developments. This is call of shame news today. I actually bring some good news. Remember all those rats I've called out for boosting recently—all those wannabe Pros that need to drop cash at bu stations to shoot Bots that are flying in?
Call of Duty agree, there are about to be wiped from the leaderboards, so keep an eye on the ranked leaderboards, and if anyone has been removed, they have been caught boosting despite the warnings given to them by Activision. The streamers are all devastated by this news; they actually tried to tell you all that it's not boosting, hilarious, or FIFA.
In the meantime, you know someone who's actually grinding. You know, I don't know, man. I really don't like going against Activision. They do help my career, and they have, like, their game has literally created a career for me, but like, I'm going to keep it a buck, man. What they're doing right now is very, very well, and I don't agree with that at all.
I'm very aware that I'm not getting a game right now. You don't have to tell me. I know I have trust. Now we have confirmation that dropping cash near the station is boosting I wonder how long it will take to update the World Series leaderboards because all these streamers are for boosting. Doing this in public games is one thing, but you cannot do this in a tournament where kills count.
Why is it so hard for people to understand that this is boosting? Nobody wants to watch streamers sitting on top of by-station farming kills. This is why they were all hiding with riot shields in corners like little mice during last year's Grand Final. Oh, and next time you streamers attend a land event, at least have some competitive integrity; deliberately throwing the game on purpose so your friend can win $100,000 is match fixing; remember that.
500, 000 over the team. What the heck? Is it possible we get some claps from the crowd? They don't like it. Well, we don't want to see that. Yeah, my pick just won that, and you know, Sage did take home a line share of the $500k pull, but we wanted to see him get crazy. I don't know. I think Sage said, Look, I already won $100,000 with my team.
This is my boy's skullface. I'm going to give it to him. They were awful, and that's putting it nicely. War Zone streamers are the best in the world, hiding behind Riot's shields, sandwiched among a vehicle, Pathetic. Sometime ago, Activision sued the popular cheat developer engine for creating and distributing cheat software for Call of Duty.
Activision clearly stated that among the customers of the cheat software were high-profile streamers—not stream streamers but high-profile. This is because the big streamers are cheating, and most used engines during the lockdowns to build their brand. Well, yesterday, a court ruled in favor of Activision Publishing, stating that the cheat developer must now pay Activision a whopping $14 million under the DMCA.
The minimum amount Activision can seek is $200 per download, and only within the United States. The maximum they could have asked for was $2,500. If Activision asked for the maximum, the cheat developer would have to pay back $180 million, and that's just based on downloads from the United States.
They will also need to pay the court costs of just under $300,000. The engine-owning website must be transferred to Activision; this comes as the popular cheat developer is still offline since their detection by Ricochet. I will not make any guesses about what will happen, as I have not spoken to the cheat developer or Activision.
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