Video evidence to speed up Tribunal processes?

CheftoniFTW·1/13/2017, 7:14:55 PM·2 votes·1,172 views

Hi Riot,

My post was removed because it was not deemed relevant to the category. Allow me to elaborate.

Say summoner x intentionally feeds in a game (be it by running down a lane, forcing fights and not participating (not casting abilities, not attacking, etc), creating an unpleasant game for up to 9 other people. Could it be made possible for a video submission option (now available with League's new client) to speed up tribunal processes? The current closest procedure is posting it to Youtube and sending a link to make bans. One could view it as the claimant presenting evidence for their case. In this process, behaviour moderation could also see recurring behaviours and causes that could perhaps create new preventative measures?

To create evidence towards an expected argument: "No one will be slogging through thousands of videos, to go through this."

  1. I would assume this is the current tribunal process:
  • Tribunal receives reports.
  • Considers evidence: (Number of reports (Not everyone reports, I sometimes click "Play Again" and forget to report a toxic player), Report comments, Game statistics, chat log (not all toxic players have to speak) and look at the actual game in the case of extreme cases.)
  • Makes judgement based on evidence.
  • Send notification to reporting summoners. (To which, I have received only one in my 4 years of playing League of Legends)

Video evidence is already being watched by whatever small council currently stands. This proactive decision on the summoner's part could speed up the process exponentially. This would only function for intentional feeding or evidence of foul play.

2 . If anything, this could encourage either volunteers or if Riot wants to be extremely pro-active in moderating toxic behaviour could hire people to look at the video evidence and create faster judgement. (I don't actually expect jobs to be created, this just could be Riot's contribution in creating jobs. People who actively want to lower toxicity and maybe receive benefits(?) could potentially be interested in this.)

Expected argument 2: "I am not going to go through the extra trouble to report someone." This discussion is for Riot to offer an option which honestly, puts little work on their part in an effort to better the community. No one is forcing every summoner to submit video evidence, this is just something that could be done by the community's part to also better the community.

Thoughts?

4 Comments

Kei1431/13/2017, 7:55:37 PM1 votes

Send notification to reporting summoners. (To which, I have received only one in my 4 years of playing League of Legends)

This is where you are wrong.

The system doesn't send out notifications unless your game was the one that punished them, not while it is building a case towards them.

Also, Riot can already see the gameplay videos. There is no need to submit extra videos.

Magical Player1/13/2017, 8:37:05 PM1 votes

Riot has access to all the information you wish to be processed You can also frame "video evidence" in many ways to make it appear the party in question is more or less guilty. But as stated before riot already has access to the game

Kartagia1/13/2017, 9:50:10 PM1 votes

You miss Support Singed case proving that Tribunal is not about breaking rules, but being reported. Investigation prove all accusations wrong, but punishment was correct, and nobody giving false report is punished.

Blast Deadlift1/14/2017, 5:43:48 AM1 votes

lul OP thinks that riot has unlimited bandwidth and downloads yet he hasn't noticed that it's hard enough for them to keep half america under 100 ms in game. GG OP GG.