Nope, they had to remove it else inno wouldn't approve it.
I've seen quite a few private trackers (private servers, discord bots) however, so now it's down to if you're lucky enough to be in the same ally as someone who runs one.
I've seen quite a few private trackers (private servers, discord bots) however, so now it's down to if you're lucky enough to be in the same ally as someone who runs one.
Thats odd, Inno did not have a problem with this kind of data from athenasrecords times not sure what changed their opinion now lolNope, they had to remove it else inno wouldn't approve it.
I've seen quite a few private trackers (private servers, discord bots) however, so now it's down to if you're lucky enough to be in the same ally as someone who runs one.
I didn't realize it wasn't allowed since I thought the general rule was automation of game actions is banned, and I can't see how mere statistics breaks that rule. Regardless, how hard can it be to make a program that tracks the stats? I'll have to ask a comp-sci friend lol
there is a thing called General Data Protection Regulation, and since Inno is a German company they are subjected to privacy and data protection laws, tracking ones activity times is not exactly legal, so most if not all trackers had to remove that feature, its been a matter of time really, while its perfectly fine with inno tracking whenever you logged on among other things
Tracking activity levels is not illegal under GDPR
That GDPR is a mightily long read to be 100% sure that tracking activity levels is not illegal
It's tracking ABP gain in a game. Of which, doesn't contain personal information. GDPR won't apply to the tracking of ABP gain
To be fair, your earlier comment said activity levels not ABP so activity levels could as LB stated be considered illegal under GDPR due to the consent or no consent given by individuals to allow 3rd parties to publish
Let's not start quoting these laws as I think it would get silly and an extremely long thread