• Habgdnv a day ago

    Does that mean that finally some Ubisoft executive can have jail time when they shut down the servers and I no longer have access to my fancy hat I bought few years ago? The case would be even more clean because there would be real world money involved. - Just thinking...

    • undefined 21 hours ago
      [deleted]
      • kyboren a day ago

        If they enter the UK, then theoretically, maybe? But realistically: Good luck convincing a prosecutor to charge them.

        According to the court opinion[0]:

          It is for all these reasons that anything in the contractual documents between Jagex
          and the players, or in the civil law more generally, which would preclude the player
          having any enforceable private law personal property rights in the gold pieces, is not
          determinative as to whether they are property for the purposes of the definitions in the
          Theft Act.
        
        The court draws a comparison to precedent where drug dealers stole illegal drugs from other drug dealers, which were also found to be "property" as defined by the Theft Act[1]:

          It was confirmed in R v Smith (Michaael Andrew) [2011] EWCA Crim 66 that illegally held
          Class A drugs are property within the meaning of the Theft Act and are capable of being
          stolen. A theft or robbery amongst rival drug gangs can be indicted as such, because the
          criminal law is concerned with the public order consequences of preventing such behaviour,
          notwithstanding that it would be contrary to public policy to recognise any property
          rights for the purposes of civil enforcement between drug dealers.
        
        The court then approvingly quotes another judge, who in turn quotes Smith's Law of Theft, 9th ed.:

          "[...] The criminal law is concerned with keeping the Queen’s peace, not vindicating
          individual property rights." That observation articulates the principle to be applied in
          the present appeal.
        
        So, by that logic, if gamers start doling out murderous retribution against Ubisoft execs for "stealing" their in-game hats, the fact that the gamers have no enforceable property rights in those hats is irrelevant, and the responsible executive(s) could be found criminally liable under the Theft Act because "stealing" gamers' in-game hats threatens the King's peace.

        [0]: https://caselaw.nationalarchives.gov.uk/ewca/crim/2026/4/dat..., p. 14

        [1]: Ibid., p. 13

      • throwaway89201 a day ago

        Fourteen years after the Supreme Court of the Netherlands found the same in a criminal case against teenagers, also about Runescape items (in 2007), establishing that in-game items can be considered property and therefore can be stolen [1]. Specifically theft with assault and threats, all committed jointly.

        [1] https://nl.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arrest_RuneScape

        • hyperhello a day ago

          What do you do with RuneScape gold? Do you spend it at a store? What if the weapons are defective? Can you rob or murder players for their gold? What kind of nutty lawsuits can happen now?

          • terribleperson 14 hours ago

            My thought would be that the game mechanics essentially constitute a contract regarding what you and others can do with your in-game property. Something would only be a crime if it's outside of those terms.

          • pants2 21 hours ago

            Is Verac's Flail included? Also what is the statute of limitations on this? I might have a revenge arc on a scammer from my childhood here...