This MP Wants People Who Steal World Of Warcraft Weapons To Be Punished Like Real-Life Thieves

He says virtual theft should be treated like real-life theft in the eyes of the law.

A member of parliament wants the law changed so that people who steal virtual items including swords and wizard robes in online games are treated like real-life thieves.

A member of parliament wants the law changed so that people who steal virtual items including swords and wizard robes in online games are treated like real-life thieves.

Blizzard Entertainment

Mike Weatherley, who is David Cameron's chief adviser on intellectual property, asked ministers to consider new laws that would mean "people who steal online items in video games with a real-world monetary value receive the same sentences as criminals who steal real-world items of the same monetary value".

The Conservative MP, who himself plays the fantasy roleplaying game Warcraft, told BuzzFeed that players sometimes spend large amounts of real world money on in-game items.

"If you've spent £500 on building up your armed forces and someone takes them away online, I guess you can feel hard done-by and you want your £500 back," he said. "People shouldn't be doing it."

"If you've spent £500 on building up your armed forces and someone takes them away online, I guess you can feel hard done-by and you want your £500 back," he said. "People shouldn't be doing it."

Electronic Arts

Weatherley said any law change would be about creating parity between online and offline penalties.

"The perception from some people is if you steal online it's less of a crime than if you steal physically," he said.

"If it genuinely is someone who's paid in the game and they've had that stolen, that's probably no different to something in the physical world."


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