
One of the unique aspects of the sci-fi massively multiplayer online game
EVE Online is that it has a peer-elected council of players that represents the interests of
EVE's subscribers to the title's developer
CCP Games, working with them to improve the MMO. This select group of
EVE Online players is called the
Council of Stellar Management (CSM).
No other online game in operation has anything quite like it, but that's because
EVE Online is one of the few games where something like this would even work. Given the scope of interactions that happen in
EVE's single shard setting of thousands of solar systems where player actions have the
potential to affect others in the game, it comes as no surprise that players can take the game very seriously. They form
military and political alliances to conquer and hold regions of space. Players even
establish financial institutions built upon the game's virtual economy. Any insider knowledge about how the game's
New Eden galaxy will change through future development could be valuable. CSM delegates are expressly forbidden from divulging or using insider information for their own advantage, or those of their friends.
However,
CCP Games revealed today that exactly such a situation has arisen. Larkonis Trassler, a prominent member of the
Council of Stellar Management, used insider information to attempt to profit in the game's virtual InterStellar Kredit (ISK) currency. He has stepped down from his position on the council and his accounts have been banned by CCP for Non-disclosure Agreement violations.
Continue reading EVE Online player elected council rep steps down in wake of insider trading
EVE Online player elected council rep steps down in wake of insider trading originally appeared on Massively on Tue, 08 Sep 2009 20:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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