Mon May 4, 2009 2:03PM EDT
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Things are looking up on the swine flu front, as deaths are trending down, but we're certainly not out of the woods yet. And God help us if this thing goes pandemic, because experience tells us that in the modern era, government-mandated quarantines simply don't work very well.
How do we know this? Experts are looking to the popular video game World of Warcraft, which has become useful as a surprisingly applicable example of how quarantines work in the real world -- or rather, how they often don't.
Some backstory: In 2005, World of Warcraft's developers were looking for a way to reduce the power of some of the game's most powerful characters. Their answer: A virtual virus called "Corrupted Blood" which would deal damage to anyone infected with it over time and which was designed to automatically spread to other nearby characters who wandered by. But Corrupted Blood spread beyond the area in which it was supposed to be contained, and soon the "illness" was out of control -- with weaker characters infected by Corrupted Blood dying in droves.
Dying in WoW isn't quite as horrible as dying in real life, but it does have consequences, causing players to lose power and items and so on. Corrupted Blood had an effectiveness of 100% if you came near an infected player, and the only precaution that would prevent infection was staying away from others with the virus. WoW developer Blizzard issued a strict quarantine in an attempt to control the outbreak, but despite all of this, most players simply ignored it.
The result: Four million of the then-six million players ended up infected, and a reported million-plus "died" as a result. Blizzard ultimately had to give up on containment and reset its servers to get things back in order.
Now the Corrupted Blood incident is being analyzed again as a fascinating model for the way real-world disease can spread despite the best intentions of the powers that be. While the CDC may want quarantined individuals to stay put and uninfected individuals to keep out of danger zones, human nature compels different behaviors. With Corrupted Blood, curiosity seekers would wander in to the hot zone anyway to see what the fuss was all about, and more malicious players would intentionally break the quarantine to attempt to infect others. And of course many more people just carried on with their virtual lives, unfazed by the risks and uninterested in changing their routines. All of these behaviors have analogues in the real world, too, and they could -- and likely will -- happen again. Lock your doors.
Join in the discussion. Here you'll see the comments in the order they were posted.
Interesting, but there are a few problems with the WoW model 1) viruses are not 100% efficient in transmission 2) Immune system function and player level are not equal 3) Sick people tend to stay home in bed - not run around spreading disease 4) IT"S A FRICKING GAME
one word......RELAX! And what world are you living in that number 3 is accurate? How do you think disease spreads....people come into my office sick constantly!
/wrists if ur scared of the flu. seriously, people get sick everyday. what is new about the "swine" flu anyway? is it the cool new name? more people die from the "common" flu and no one raises a fuss about that. Get on with it swine flu isn't news anymore than it is a mere annoyance in the news on a constant basis. Oh and now "swine flu" has infected WoW. Yay... :|
Great article. I would like to see more articles like this about other subjects.
So if I think I have swine flu I should stay home....hum, that gives me more time to WoW *cough, cough* ;) Truly interesting article,I wasn't around in WoW for the corrupted blood virus. I enjoyed reading about it!
So cebarn4@ymail.com.....did you read the article?!?! ROFL - it had nothing to do with Swine Flu infecting WoW - might want to read the article before spouting off.
"Dying in WoW isn't quite as horrible as dying in real life, but it does have consequences, causing players to lose power and items and so on." -- What a moron...you don't lose items or "power" (whatever that is) if you die in WoW, you just have to run back to your body and rez.
Too freakin funny.This reporter should research more.If he had he would also know that WOW had a disease named swine flu before our current real life one.Makes you wonder if someone at the CDC doesn't have a quirky sense of humor,maybe even plays the game.However,david.smith603 is correct,this reporter knows jack about the game,and what's wrong with him that he would even begin to compare the two?People die for real,characters don't.Get a grip you fool.
obviously canadacea.rm is a moron and should stick to french. if you understand plain english you would notice i am saying i think swine flu is being made a bigger deal than it should be. also, the end of my statement is in reference to blizzard putting a "swine flu" into wow. it is a "joke" from them in WoW. now go back to being a socialist and stand in line to wait for your health care sir.
Maybe if more people stayed at home & played WoW there wouldn't be so much of a real wold outbreak of Swine flu(LOL).
French? lol .. wtf are you talking about - born and raised in America and not a sir, thank you. Not a socialist either. I think it is pretty funny however that so many people are getting so worked up over a silly article. I also think it is funny that online gaming gets people so worked up. Do you play WoW cebarn? Are you one of the people that I had to place on ignore because you wouldn't shut up about politics in /general?
The funny thing is that the common flu DOES cause more deaths every year than the strains of avian and swine flu combined...this is just a scare tactic. Again. But why does our WONDERFUL *hack-cough* government seem so intent on latching onto this? Yikes, people...go read through the GIVE Act - that's a lot more scary than some virus that'll die out in half a year's time anyway...
I was a food inspector specialist and a first responder for many years and there are a few ideas that come to mind namely"The boy who cried wolf " "If we don't learn from the mistakes of the past , we are destined to repeat them " and with the election of Obama and his democrats " IGNORANCE IS BLISS " The are substantial number of ignorant voting people who don't exercise normal hygene or safeguards against spreading disease because they don't care or even learn about the world around them . These people are more dangerous than any disease and need to be educated. auggie
What is there to say about WoW that has not already been said? Swine flu what? I do not see the connection, I am in the military over seas assignment and there is this guy that is always ... hold on ahem ALWAYS on his computer and some how Influenza H has blew itself inside his room and infected him with it... and AIDS. Keep up the good work and WE NEED TO STOP IT BEFORE IT GETS TO BE WITHIN ...meeeeeee e eeee e e
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6 Posted by candacea.rm on Mon May 4, 2009 5:38PM EDT Report Abuse
I don't think it is a scare tactic at all....just recognizing that what people do in the game says a lot about who they are and how they react to situations. I don't think it is too far-fetched or unrealistic at all. After all, most of what characters do in WoW is done by a human sitting at a computer - you can't really say that what the character is being moved to do in the game has nothing with someones personal instincts. I laughed when I saw the article, but it really does make some sense.