Verrliit,
The idea that watching the server is breaking the law is so retarded I can't resist responding to your assertion here. :-)
1. Google hit #1 when I searched on this just now was
http://www.rbs2.com/privacy.htm which explains a lot about US privacy law. In its initial definition part of it says "The right of privacy is restricted to individuals who are in a place that a person would reasonably expect to be private (e.g., home, hotel room, telephone booth). There is no protection for information that either is a matter of public record or the victim voluntarily disclosed in a public place."
2. The PlaneShift server is a public place, with no expectation of privacy. The code is open source and anyone can see that the devs have access to chat data from there. The /report command is public knowledge and is well documented in code, manuals, websites and forum threads like this one, as are the (lack of) privacy issues implied therein.
3. With no expectation of privacy there is no invasion of privacy.
4. These are all USA definitions I am using because I'm American. I don't know where you are located, but perhaps Italian law should be operative here instead of USA law, since Talad is the director? Perhaps Singaporean law should trump all others because the server doing the monitoring and reporting is physically there? Perhaps the jurisdictions of the two parties involved in the leaked chat should apply? Perhaps the laws of Sweden should apply because the mirror you downloaded your client from was there? What definitions do we use? I have no idea. You seem to have a certain country's laws in mind as you write your vague accusations. What country is that?
5. If you think Sony Online and Blizzard aren't doing the same thing, (or more by logging *everything*) then you are naive. I could equally as validly argue that we on PS should log EVERYTHING anyone ever says permanently so that we have the audit trail if we are ever sued. Imagine someone kills themselves and others claim he only did it because people in PS told him to. So his parents sue PS (in what country who knows). How do we prove what happened or disprove those stories?
I'd certainly be fine with logging all chat permanently. That might be the safest legal solution for us, and disk space is cheap...
- Vengeance