I guess players should accept their fate in shooters. Seriously since I don't work in gaming industry I can't tell anyone what to do in a given company. What do you suggest then? What should player's community do?
Insisting on developers seem to be the best way.
I asked a question, threw some instances and I received from you feedback that I am unfamiliar with the topic and a selfish person.
What's the point of it?
A good start would be waiting to calm down before discussing it or reporting it. The stuff gets pretty technical as far as designing and implementing security tools, and monitoring server activity. The chat or complaints that are filled with exaggerations and inaccurate generalities aren't going to be taken as seriously.
About all you can do is try to play with known fair players and friends, take note of when and where suspect activity happens, and report it as soon as possible to retain all that. Otherwise you're going to want to jot/type the details for when you can report it.
When it comes to security methods used though, that's usually decided by the higher ups that own the dev team (pubs or even huge marketing corps like ZeniMax). They're likely going to spend the money how they see fit on what security they want to use.
There has to be a huge collective of players complaining about the same type of exploits to change that, which is what happened with Punkbuster. The phrase "It takes a village" comes to mind. Part of what hurt PB though is they were either unwilling or incapable of implementing more advanced methods. Otherwise I'm sure it had been different.
One of the most ever changing and technological industries anymore is cyber security, of any kind. You really have to invest wisely in it and know what you're doing, because hackers adapt better than most. One possibility I can think of is eventually going to thumbprint logins vs passwords. Password accounts are easily hacked and also conceal identity to the point of hiding hackers as well.
Lots of people are using thumbprints instead of passwords anymore, even for high end business transactions. It's a secure way of knowing exactly who's doing what from clear across the globe. Hackers would be less likely to try to exploit a service that requires a thumbprint login, because that thumbprint reveals your identity, and it's also far harder to access a thumbprint for nefarious reasons than a password. We're talking years before something like that will be plausible though.