after you've viewed it once, I don't much see the point of even
keeping the file. I don't see what the fuss is about. If someone
cheated, ban them, end of story. No need to worry about it later. Who
cares what happened a month ago, or 6 months, or a year, etc. Soon
we'll know if VAC2's any good, and even if it isn't we all know how to
spot cheaters anyways. Protocol updates don't happen very often, and
when they do, oh well. Time marches on. Pitching a humongous hissy fit
about it isn't going to do any good. I don't know why you guys have so
much trouble understanding this, but sometimes Valve's got to change
the protocol to fix something. Who cares if you can't ban a few
cheaters from that week. If they come back at all, they'll probably
just be cheating again and you can ban them this week. It's definitely
not as big a deal as you seem to think it is.

On 5/30/05, Alexander Kobbevik <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I agree with Whisper very much.
> And many anticheat-databases store the demo along with the description of
> the cheat violation.
> It must be very frustrating for them when suddenly all their demoes they
> worked so hard for doesn't work anymore.
>
> Is there no way to make a Demo viewer of some kind?
> That has the possibility to have compability with older netcodes?
> Probably a huge download... but it would be worth it.. I think...
> Well.. just brain storming...
>
> Take care.
>
>
> -Alexander


--
Clayton Macleod

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