It's bullshit though, so many people have been using it wrong than we now have a word "literally" that both means "exactly true" and "not exactly true", with no way of distinguishing how it's used.
Why even bother having a dictionary if they're just going to ignore it and add the wrong meaning of the word anyway if it's said enough? It would be like changing the definition of the word true to mean both true or false.
The English language has been on a steady decline for many (hundreds of) years now. The decline has accelerated with the advent of electronic communications and other "concessions" made surrounding the proper use of the language.
My guess is that it will continue to devolve. If you are going to get worked up about the perfect use of English, you midaswell stay inside your house and never engage in communication. This is especially true for electronic communication (message boards specifically) where you are going to get a large cross section of not only ages, but education level and English as a second language speakers as well.
My use of the word "literally" in this thread was purposefully done in order to invoke an actual image in the reader's head of the dev team, perhaps the retail packaging, or the Lord of Terror himself defecating among the sheets. I decided not to go into a graphic description of the event to keep the post short and to the point.
The nice thing about the English language is that once you can get past the rigid understanding of it, it becomes quite playful in interpretation. This is both a blessing and a burden for some.
Back on topic:
Gold floor clarification for the individual that asked: Gold is tied to a real money value due to how the D3 system was created. Blizzard's gold floor, that is, the lowest amount you could sell an amount of gold for, was 25cents for 1 million. They lowered it to 25cents for 10 million. This is the root of the dupe.
Gems were selling for roughly 60 cents in the RMAH, which amounted to about 24 million gold. Gem prices started rising like crazy, at one point hitting 200million plus. Now this could be argued as legitimate flipping; there are no checks and balances in place to prevent this type of disparity between the 2 auction houses.
The real issue is when people discovered they could start an auction in the real money auction house to sell gold, and then cancel it. At the cancellation, the gold would inexplicably double itself when it was sent back to the player's stash.
So for now:
No rollback. Economy is boned (worse than before). Many top tier wizards are bailing out (we are talking top 10 ranking guys here).
Blizzard, as per usual, is pulling the old Iraqi information minister routine: "It's not bad, nothing to see here!"