Computerworld on Blizzard's Warden at work
We've covered the topic of Warden in the past, and you've probably already got an opinion on what it does to your computer system. Blizzard runs the Warden program alongside your WoW client, and while it runs it examines what else is running on your system -- if there are any third party programs (either hacks or cheat programs) interfering with the client, it lets Blizzard know, and shuts down the client. The obvious privacy concern here, of course, is that Warden is basically watching what you do outside of the game. And while Blizzard has maintained that the program is simply meant to check for hacks and cheats (they also say that no personally identifiable information is sent back to them, though IPs and other network information definitely are), there's always a chance that Warden could see you doing something you don't want it to.Computerworld's Security section has a nice long article on all of the implications of Warden, especially in one of the more sensitive areas of security: the workplace. While most of us probably won't ever play World of Warcraft at work, there are certainly companies where installing and playing the game at certain times is appropriate. And it's probably in those situations where Warden could be its most dangerous. If you trust Blizzard with your information, then you'll have nothing to worry about. But if you don't know what Warden is sending back, there's always a chance that it could be something more sensitive than you'd like.
Of course, there is a hard and fast solution to this: don't play World of Warcraft on computers that have anything you wouldn't want shared with Blizzard or anyone else. As Computerworld concludes, it's a choice-and-consequences kind of thing. Warden is up and running every time you play WoW, for better or worse -- if you don't want it watching what you're doing, the only guaranteed way out is to not play World of Warcraft.
Filed under: Analysis / Opinion, Cheats, Odds and ends, Blizzard, Account Security
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Reader Comments (Page 1 of 3)
Amstruq Mar 9th 2009 7:09PM
American team show bad behavior..nothing new there...
jim carey Mar 9th 2009 7:37PM
lol wrong post im guessing?
kozom Mar 9th 2009 7:10PM
first is to post; as fail is to you.
Ashvoyager Mar 9th 2009 7:09PM
This is the first time that I've seen you not insert a "first" in your post which is the first post on this article.
Matazuma Mar 9th 2009 7:12PM
Blizzard is Double plus good.
skreeran Mar 10th 2009 12:31AM
George Orwin.
BIG BLIZZARD IS WATCHING.
jbodar Mar 10th 2009 2:18AM
Who Wards the Wardens?
bundee Mar 10th 2009 2:24PM
Orwell?
Eisengel Mar 10th 2009 3:25PM
botnets
jfofla Mar 9th 2009 7:15PM
You mean to tell me some of the millions addicted to Warcrack play at work?????
I know I do!
At least we know Euros don't. They would need jobs to do that.
charlie Mar 9th 2009 9:27PM
Is there a way to run WoW as a restricted user account so that it isn't able to get other process info?
Aaron A. Mar 10th 2009 1:28AM
Nope, that's pretty much public info as far as your OS is concerned. Speaking of which, though I love Linux with all my geeky heart, Unix derivative (Linux, Solaris, Mac OS) won't give you any more privacy -- at least as far as WoW is concerned -- than you'd get with Windows. Since you activated Warden (by executing WoW), it has all the authority it needs to do its thing.
Bottom line, though, I think it's a pretty minimal risk; they already know who you are, and they already have a credit card number if you're on auto-renew. Unless you're working with top-secret information while playing WoW, there's not much they can get that they don't already have.
Verit Mar 10th 2009 8:00AM
Actually ... wow runs just fine in a restricted account without admin privs... Thats the way I've been running every app on my machine for ages.
The way glider works is it has a driver process that hooks into the windows kernel (so called rootkit), and a user process written in .net. The driver intercepts windows api's and scrubs the task list, and the window list of anything related to it - pretty much making it undetectable by warden.
Still - doing all that leaves a lot of footprints and I'm sure warden detects some condition (bug more likely) that glider leaves unchecked and generates a report based on that - which is in turn how they ban people.
Ashvoyager Mar 9th 2009 7:30PM
Congratulations!
That's quite an accomplishment!
AltairAntares Mar 9th 2009 7:33PM
There's how many million play this game? That's a lot of data to sift through....
Faar Mar 10th 2009 1:31AM
Nobody at Blizzard sifts the data from warden. In fact, warden doesn't even phone home unless it detects that you're cheating, and then all it does is report what cheat you're using.
People have complained in the past about warden looking at open window titles, browser urls and so on and claimed this violates their privacy, but all this stuff is open-access information in the windows operating system. Any number of other applications does the same without anyone complaining about it.
jim carey Mar 9th 2009 7:38PM
ok, what npc is that and why cant our tier sets look that sweet?
Camaris Mar 9th 2009 7:48PM
http://www.wowwiki.com/Maiev_Shadowsong
Justo Mar 9th 2009 7:55PM
is there a way to disable Warden? like from the processes menu or something?
Aaron A. Mar 9th 2009 8:33PM
Like any program, I'm sure it /can/ be disabled, probably by altering the WoW client software. Regardless of how you'd do it, it's a TOS violation. In all likelihood, Blizz also has something set up on the server side to confirm that Warden is running, so you'd likely get booted / banned if you tried to disable it.
If you're concerned about what Warden's doing, I hear there's a "watch the watchers" addon called Governor that tells you when Warden pings your system and what it asks for.
http://kotaku.com/gaming/crime/wows-warden-has-a-governor-131822.php
Blizz has kinda-sorta indicated that they don't like the program (it could conceivably give away info that would let cheaters circumvent Warden), but as far as I know, they've never done anything specifically to hinder or disable it. If anything, it proves that they're checking for cheats, rather than data-mining you for marketing purposes.