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I agree. I have been a loyal user of Curse for years but when they released their app I didn't see the value and didn't want to install an attack vector on my pc. I still go to Curse, sometimes several times a week but definitely it has become a worse experience over the years.

As for Discord... my guild leader switched our raid team from Teamspeak and there was some acrimony because a guild member refused to install Discord as he felt strongly that it was a security threat and malware.

I did try to substantiate these claims but couldn't find proof one way or the other.

As a precaution I've resized my hard drive and installed a separate Windows for gaming and encrypted each partion separately to isolate Discord from my personal files.

Several weeks into using Discord I think it is better than Teamspeak for overall features but in a raid situation with 20 on simultaneously the quality isn't as good as paying for a private Teamspeak server. Having said that though Discord is free and allows for a much richer experience so if they can sort out voice reliability and quality it will be a compelling proposition.

I still have concerns as to the security of Discord as their website pretty much brushes over the topic but they do offer two factor for what it's worth... but I can't raid with my guild without it so I'm stuck using it.



What has curse done to cause this amount of distrust?

(I assume you don't do this for every application you install)


I only install applications from:

a) vendors I trust b) confident in their security, and c) couldn't write the software myself.

In the case of the Curse client I just wrote my own batch scripts and used cygwin. I could have just as easily done it in Python or AutoIt.

As I wrote the software I know there is virtually no chance for malware.

I can't be as certain about the Curse client. As far as I know it isn't open source.

Maybe I'm more paranoid than most about security but it could be because I know how easily most systems are compromised.


With Curse as a company, the bad times began when they started consolidating independent sites into "Gamepedia".




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