Our friends over at VirtuallyBlind have reported that Blizzard has won the ongoing lawsuit against MDY Industries, the makers of the most popular World of Warcraft bot: Glider. I’ll leave the legal commentary to Mr. Duranske, because what we’re interested in here are the long-term effects of the World of Warcraft economy. As I said in another thread, a round of banning on Blizzard’s part caused a dramatic rise in the real-money value of virtual WoW gold. Could a similar increase in prices be on the rise?

While no official statistics could be found, I’d be willing to bet that the majority of botters use Glider. After all, it’s the most widely used bot that has sold a few hundred thousand copies (according to information that came up in court). On the other hand, many of the gold farming operations in Asia do everything by hand with extremely cheap labor (see this preview of an interesting documentary). So, if Glider has been deemed to be infringing upon Blizzard’s copyright whenever it’s in use, does this give Blizzard a right to shut down the sale of Glider? If so, would this drive supply of gold down and shoot prices up? Or will the hard-working Chinese prevail and keep prices down for us lazy players?

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