Quote:
Originally Posted by Frieza_Prexus
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Generally, under vicarious liability, illegal activities are never held to be under the scope of duties. This is essential to the concept. If a pest control worker sets a house on fire to get rid of all the pests, such an action was not within the scope of his duties.
Similarly, I suggest that a lone individual exploiting to assist the guild is not, and can never be, within such a scope. However, if it was blessed and supported by the leadership, that becomes a different story entirely in which guild-wide punishments can then be brought into play.
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And now we're back to getsome's comment that your examples are utter bullshit. This is a game with rules and no real property is damaged because of someone's in-game actions. Thus getsome's NFL example is much more appropriate: you break an NFL rule on the field, your team backs up 10 yards, you don't wear your pink sweatbands during breast cancer month, the commish fines you (individually)