Scripts like BOB really enhance the game - I can hardly remember how I played games before it - but they also give players that use them an advantage over players that don't. The thing is, anyone can get BOB and benefit instantly from it, so it's not much of a problem.
With things like clickable maps, though, things get a bit more murky. It's also right there for everyone to use, but the advantages are much, much more apparent than BOB's, especially in freestyle games. I think it's safe to say that if you have two players, one with clickable maps and one without, who are both equally skilled with equally fast internet connections and you drop them in a bunch of freestyle games together, the player with clickable maps would win significantly more games than his scriptless counterpart. Because of the incredible advantage clickable maps offers players, many players have called for regulation or even removal of the script. Personally, I would tell those players complaining to get the script for themselves and level the playing field, but that's just me.
Which brings me to another thing I've been wondering about: scripts that provide advantages not found elsewhere but are not publicly available. Should using these scripts be considered cheating? Googling the definition of cheating returns a definiton stating that cheating is "any behavior outside the rules that is intended to give an unfair advantage to one or more players." CC has loads of scripts that give advantages to players, but these are all fair because anyone can use the scripts. However, if a script is not publicly available, then only certain players can use them and things would not be fair, and that would be the definition of cheating.
Finally there's the rumours of a script that changes classic art and classic shapes back into plain ol' classic, and changes the new CC lingo back into the old RISK terminology. The script may or may not exist, but if it does, what are the implications? Could CC get into trouble with Hasbro for such a script? Could players get in trouble for using it?
So yeah, discuss.
P.S. Here's a quote from another thread that I think is somewhat relevant:
Clickable maps are like guns in America. The people who have them wanna keep 'em, the people who don't have them are terrified of the people that do and want them removed.
Remember kiddies, if you outlaw guns, only outlaws will have guns!