It is $6,000,000 for disturbing the in-game balance economy. The in-game balance disturbance is, according to Blizzard, the fact that botters lower the current price of a certain item so that other people grinding that item will not get the same amount of gold for
WoW Gold.
At last $6,000,000 is that Glider is approximated to have sold about 100,000 copied at $25 a piece. So, basically Blizzard wants that money. When you think about it, considering at least 500,000 of Blizzards current subscribers are Chinese farmers or other bots, you could basicly say that 1% of every account uses Glider. That is pretty sick.)
But that is basicly the full story. I am sorry for the somewhat long and pretty bad write-up.
A few large news-stations report further on this matter, and Googling something like "Blizzard vs Glider", "MMO Glider trial", "MDY industries vs Blizzard" etc, should give you plenty of results to get
wow gold.
This is actually a really big case. Not because it is about
WoW Gold and botters, but it is because basically any company that offers software will be able to claim copyright-violation against users in certain situations. Now I am not too informed on the impacts of this matter, but you can easily find out more. Some have said that this entire case could change the way software companies acts about
World Of Warcraft Gold. Last and least, in my latter exploration of the English language I have started using "in to", "at least" and "a lot". Earlier I used "into", "atleast" and "alot". What is the correct spelling?
As Glider actually bypasses Blizzards security system Warden (Yes, it search your computer for anything it wants to and you have agreed to it) by copying some elements of
WoW Gold in to your ram memory, you are actually copying Blizzard-copyrighted material in to your computer. This is legal as long as you have agreed to the Blizzard EULA.