Researchers at the University of Texas studying World of Warcraft [Updated]
A tipster informs us that researchers at the University of Texas at Austin are conducting a study to try to determine the "personalities and motivations" of people participating in World of Warcraft and other online games. And they're asking for our help! So if you have 10 or 15 minutes of free time, why not go fill out their MMORPG Survey? (Or if learning about the personalities and motivations of yourself and fellow players doesn't interest you, there's another study running at the university that seeks to understand how people interact in online environments. However, I've got to warn you, that one will take 20 to 30 minutes of your time.) The survey itself looks like a standard personality test, and, I have to say, is pretty uninteresting. However, I'm quite interested in seeing what sort of results they come out with in the end -- and if you're as curious as I am participating will only lead to more varied results in the end.
Update: There is a great deal of discussion in our comments about the possibility of this site being a scam of some sort. While I agree that the domain name of the site is fishy, the content looks completely legitimate. (And, yes, I did run through this on my personal computer before passing it on to you.) With the original and subsequent e-mails we've received about the site, I would say it's legitimate. However, I have removed the link to the site pending further verification.
Update 2: After trading e-mails with Austin Harley (yes, through a valid University of Texas mailing address), one of the researchers involved in the study, I am convinced that this is, in fact, a valid project. Of the odd hosting arrangement, he says:
A good friend of mine offered to build a web page for my site and link it to an already functional database he had. He said this would be easier on him than building one off a webpage on the utexas server so I happily agreed since he was really doing me a huge favor. I had no idea so many people were worried about a potential scam or that my site would cause such a stir.
Update 3: To further assure anyone's concerns, I have talked to a member of the UT faculty overseeing this project, who, again, assures me that this is a legitimate study.
Update: There is a great deal of discussion in our comments about the possibility of this site being a scam of some sort. While I agree that the domain name of the site is fishy, the content looks completely legitimate. (And, yes, I did run through this on my personal computer before passing it on to you.) With the original and subsequent e-mails we've received about the site, I would say it's legitimate. However, I have removed the link to the site pending further verification.
Update 2: After trading e-mails with Austin Harley (yes, through a valid University of Texas mailing address), one of the researchers involved in the study, I am convinced that this is, in fact, a valid project. Of the odd hosting arrangement, he says:
A good friend of mine offered to build a web page for my site and link it to an already functional database he had. He said this would be easier on him than building one off a webpage on the utexas server so I happily agreed since he was really doing me a huge favor. I had no idea so many people were worried about a potential scam or that my site would cause such a stir.
Update 3: To further assure anyone's concerns, I have talked to a member of the UT faculty overseeing this project, who, again, assures me that this is a legitimate study.
Filed under: Analysis / Opinion, Odds and ends







Reader Comments (Page 1 of 3)
Krick Jun 28th 2007 7:05PM
Um.... does anyone else find the domain name suspicious? Are you SURE this is the UofT?
Sarah Jun 28th 2007 7:27PM
It says Oldsmar Fire Services (which owns the domain) is a fire extinguisher sales service in Florida??? And this has to do with a college survey in Texas how???
cwolf267 Jun 28th 2007 7:56PM
The keyloggers strike again!
actown Jun 28th 2007 8:02PM
Is it really a keylogger? I just did it.
cwolf267 Jun 28th 2007 9:47PM
It says i've been entered in a lottery to win gold when I finish the survey, sounds a little bit strange for a survey. Does the university of texas farm gold on all possible servers for this thing :-/
and actown, idk, it all seems very suspicous, might want to scan your computer to be safe.
Worriednow Jun 28th 2007 8:16PM
I did it too.
Please tell me its not a logger. Luckily Im not on my Game compy. These links should really be checked out before posted because I have come to trust the bloggers here and I went there cause I enjoy doing surveys for schools. I remember how hard it was to find subjects when I was in school.
Sarah Jun 28th 2007 8:08PM
For god's sake no one else click on it. It's obviously not a real college survey, the address would have ended in .edu. I don't know about you but I want to keep my characters and my credit safe thank you.
James Jun 28th 2007 8:10PM
Good point on the gold; how are they going to give that out?
As for the contacts listed on the second page, neither of the students are on the graduate student page directory page at UT Austin, which is troubling. They could be undergraduate students, however. Jody Jensen at UT Texas is real, and her contact info can be Googled.
James Jun 28th 2007 8:11PM
WoWInsider, I, and I think many others, would appreciate a comment or something on this. Can you verify this link as legitimate? Where did you find it?
Ugkul Jun 28th 2007 8:15PM
Yes really really suspicious, and even tries to give in game gold. Also why would it need to know your character name and server name?
Just sends warning bells all over.
FlupKe Jun 28th 2007 8:23PM
damnit I just did the thing, didn't read the comments..
Bryan Jun 28th 2007 8:21PM
I confirm that this is a very non-legit site. After I finished the form I had my WinPatrol program detected "VlhsU22.dll" as an added hook under the Internet Explorer folder and subname.
I WOULD NOT ADVISE ANY ONE ELSE TO SUBMIT!
Regards
Bryan
Sarah Jun 28th 2007 8:24PM
I wish someone from wowinsider would comment or take the link down before more people click on it.
JS Jun 28th 2007 8:25PM
Can a keylogger be installed without executing any .exe files or downloading anything? The website seemed straightforward enough without extra downloading or loading of anything that i could see....I mean my char name and server are available on the armory how can that be dangerous?
BigDan Jun 28th 2007 8:26PM
I haven't gotten a warning yet. Any idea whether it makes a difference if you are using Firefox?
Im gonna go scan one more time. Bah I hate getting sent to these problems.
Especially on my work pc.
Later.
FlupKe Jun 28th 2007 8:28PM
I scanned my computer and it didn't find anything. Good think I never use that IE crap.
actown Jun 28th 2007 8:29PM
im using firefox and my anti-virus dident say anything. They could be using IE exploits.
Jonathan Moore Jun 28th 2007 8:34PM
I completed the survey and then read the comments. So I ran Ad-Aware and Spybot and both didn't find anything. I also did a full search for the "VlhsU22.dll" file and did not find the file. I guess using Firefox saved me on this one.
Adam Jun 28th 2007 8:36PM
Email Address listed in survey:
please contact Jody Jensen, Ph.D., Chair, The University of Texas at Austin Institutional Review Board for the Protection of Human Subjects at (512) 232-2685 or the Office of Research Support and Compliance at (512) 471-8871 or email: orsc@uts.cc.utexas.edu.
FROM UTS WEBPAGE:
The UTS Web Server is mainly used by the UT community to publish personal web pages.
Yea.....faculty would have THAT kind of email address.....
BigDan Jun 28th 2007 8:46PM
I just ran virus scan as well and it didn't find it either.
Yay Firefox FTW!!!