Microsoft bans 1 Million Xbox Live players

By siliconindia   |   Friday, 13 November 2009, 22:07 IST   |    1 Comments
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Microsoft bans 1 Million Xbox Live players
Bangalore: Microsoft has banned as many as one million players from its Xbox Live gaming service. The company alleges that these users modified their consoles to play games, which are illegally downloaded from file sharing sites. "All consumers should know that piracy is illegal and that modifying their Xbox 360 console to play pirated discs violates the Xbox Live terms of use, will void their warranty, and result in a ban from Xbox Live," the software giant said in a statement. The move comes amid the release of "Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 2," the highly anticipated Xbox 360 game of the year, reports InformationWeek. The so-called 'warez' copies of the game reportedly showed up on pirate sites prior to its release - a development that may have prompted Microsoft to take action, possibly in concert with or at the behest of Infinity Ward, the games publisher. Xbox 360 consoles are equipped with Digital Rights Management technologies designed to detect pirated software, but some players have successfully 'modded,' or modified, their machines to circumvent DRM protections. It was not immediately clear how Microsoft detected the jury rigging. Consoles banned from Xbox Live will still function if games are played offline, but players banned from the Xbox Live service will not be able to sign into their accounts or engage other players over the internet. A player banned from Xbox Live told the U.K.'s Radio 1 that he was "gutted" and "distraught" by the decision. The player admitted paying an electronics store more than $100 to modify his Xbox so it could play pirated games. The Xbox Live gaming service counts more than 20 million members, according to Microsoft. Earlier this year, the company extended the Xbox warranty to cover a problem known as "The red ring of death."