I do believe the way that BHG’s legal team have put together their terms and policies are to protect both their, and players interests, in alignment with relevant laws. However, there does seem to be some precedent out there for games publishing usernames in association with cheating, and even prosecuting them, per terms those games have put in place. I don’t think BHG has those terms explicitly defined currently- but I also think such a modification could be made.
ChatGPT is most definitely unreliable- even when asked for direct evidence / sources / word for word quotes, I find it often fails. Here’s what I asked it and what it came up with:
Prompt:
Can you explain how the developer would be violating their privacy policy, found here
https://bighugegames.com/privacy-policy/, by publicly publishing usernames of banned player accounts for cheating in the game
Exact ChatGPT Reply:
Under Big Huge Games' privacy policy, here's what's relevant:
1. Usernames are “personal data”
The policy explicitly states that user account information—including
usernames or nicknames—is considered personal data:
That means usernames are not just innocuous labels—they're treated as information relating to a specific individual, protected under the policy.
2. Unauthorized public sharing violates policy terms
The policy describes
how and when user data can be shared. Anything beyond those permitted uses could be a breach. Publicly publishing usernames of banned accounts
is not listed as a permissible use:
- Data use is limited to internal operations, customer support, analytics, legal/compliance needs, or according to user consent.
- There's no clause allowing public shaming by posting usernames for cheating.
Publishing usernames for banning therefore contravenes the policy’s specified uses and lacks user consent.
3. No scope for “legitimate interest” exceptions
Even where “legitimate interests” might allow some data use (like fraud prevention), the policy requires that such interests
not override users’ rights and freedoms. Publicly listing banned usernames:
- Does more than protect the system (e.g. names are stigmatizing).
- Likely violates users' privacy rights, since it isn’t strictly necessary for legal or safety purposes.
4. Potential conflicts with rights under the policy
The policy gives users important rights:
Public naming of banned users can obstruct those rights. For instance, once a username is publicly displayed, erasing it fully may not be feasible.
Summary: Why it violates the policy
What happens | Policy says |
---|
Usernames are published | They are personal data |
No user consent | Policy requires defined, limited use |
Data rights infringed | Conflicts with user rights to object or restrict publishing |
Because usernames are expressly considered personal data and there's no policy basis for making them public in this context, sharing them constitutes a
privacy policy violation.
If this actually occurred, users could raise a data privacy complaint via the methods listed (e.g., email
support@bighugegames.com) or under relevant data protection laws like GDPR or CCPA.
——
This isn’t meant to minimize or take away from the point LuSt is trying to make- more so it illustrates how ChatGPT is fallible and no one should ever take it at face value.
Bottom line is, perhaps a Privacy Policy adjustment could help facilitate the publication of banned usernames; though there is much more to consider regardless from a business and community health perspective.
Definitely appreciate LuSt for bringing this discussion forward as I do think it’s one that speaks to accountability and transparency- and that is absolutely important to a lot of players.