Popular scams and how to avoid them
We have a lot of reports of scams coming in to our tip line and many of us are receiving the same phishing emails you are. Even Scott Kurtz from PvPOnline was tweeting about getting one the other day. These scams can be initiated via email to any one of your email addresses. Or they may start in game. Regardless of where they attack you, most of the scams require some form of social engineering to get your info and therefore access to your in-game valuables.
What is social engineering? Social engineering is manipulating victims to volunteer personal information about themselves in order to perpetrate a con, scam, fraud, etc. If you have seen the movie Groundhog Day, then you have seen a very good example of it. Phil, a television weatherman, is living the same day over and over. One iteration of his morning, he asks an attractive woman her name, where she went to highschool and her English teacher. The next iteration of his morning, he "accidentally" runs into her and pretends to know her from highschool, resulting in her going to bed with him.
His con works for 3 reasons:
Your WoW account is under investigation
An email gets sent to one of your email addresses (not necessarily the one you have attached to your WoW account) that says something like: "An investigation of your World of Warcraft account has found strong evidence that the account in question is being sold or traded." The email either asks you to email them your account information or it includes a link to an official looking phishing site designed to steal your info. This is essentially the same scam that has been going on for a while. It comes from what looks like a respectable source, though the only valid email would be wowaccountadmin@blizzard.com without any double "v"s or misspellings. You value protecting your account, so you give your info to this supposedly trusted source. They then use your info to steal your account.
Avoid by: Calling Blizzard directly. If your account is really under investigation, Blizzard will tell you on the phone. For more details, please see this post from Blizzard about fake emails.
In-game mail from a misspelled guildie
You receive mail from a player whose name is spelled very similarly to a guildie or friend -- perhaps with a special character or off by one letter. The mail includes a website to go to for a special deal or to look at a picture or something similar. The site either contains a keylogger or it is a phishing site. Again, when this con works, it is because it is from a source you trust (a guildie), it contains value for you (guildies often send you to interesting websites) and, if you are incautious, you are unaware that your information has been stolen until after it is. This one grabs a lot of active guildmembers because guildies often have hard to spell character names or even alts that are just misspelled versions of their mains.
Avoid by: Verify any in-game mail you get that contain external links by checking your guild roster. Also, you should have an in-guild policy that limits external links to the member restricted area of your guild forums only. In all cases, don't enter your account information unless you go to the Blizzard website directly and scan your computer daily/nightly using any of the freely available virus/malware scans.
Invite/promote request from a misspelled guildie
This one targets your guildbank and not your account. You receive a whisper, from someone who is again spelled very similar to a guildie, to have his alt invited and promoted. The imposter then cleans out your guildbank. You are basically being punished for being a considerate guildie in this situation.
Avoid by: Make sure that all invite requests come from someone in your guild roster. A quick look at your online list will show you if that person is online and will allow you to compare the names. Also, keep a category in your guild hierarchy specifically for alts that does not have access to the valuable tabs in your guildbank. It is only a mild inconvenience for main members to mail their alts anything they need.
Spectral Tiger Mount for sale in tradechat
A high level, server-known player offers up a Spectral Tiger Mount (or any other highly valuable, tradeable in-game loot) for sale at a price that is high enough to be believable, but low enough to be tempting. When contacted, the seller only asks to verify you have the gold before agreeing to send you the code via out of game email. The email contains a code and a link to a phishing site. Your account is then hacked, cleaned out and used to scam the next person. This scam gains a lot of credibility by using hacked accounts that are high level to conduct the transaction. A lot of otherwise careful players are taken in because the excitement of a great deal causes them to be incautious. For further information on this scam, read an interview with one of the actual scammers.
Avoid by: Always be extra careful when a deal seems too good. While there are legitimate sellers of these valuable items at good deals, they will usually conduct the transaction in-game. Again, only go to the Blizzard account sites directly -- never click a link in an email.
Helpful links in the comments and forums
Some of the links in the official forums and the comments here at WoW.com have been put there specifically by shady social engineers to lure unsuspecting readers into a trap. The links go to sites that contain keyloggers that download while you are loading the site. Or they are phishing sites designed to steal your information. We delete the comments that contain them when we catch them, but we don't always catch them.
Avoid by: It is safest to never click on a link in the comments or forums. But if you think it is to a trusted site, then type in the address manually, just to be safe.
Goldsellers and leveling services
Captain Obvious laughs at players who are surprised to learn that the underhanded companies offering services that are against the ToS are the same ones who are hacking accounts. Where else do you think the gold is coming from? The easiest marks for these companies are the people who use their own services, since they are voluntarily giving their information and Blizzard won't protect them.
Avoid by: Don't buy gold! Seriously. Earning gold and leveling your characters get easier with each patch. And if you think that goldbuying is a victimless activity, just scroll up and re-read. These scams wouldn't exist if there weren't a market for their stolen goods.
WoW scammers (and the most common real world criminals) need your cooperation to get your account info, so the biggest hole in your account security is you. Protect your personal data at all times. And use safety nets for when you make mistakes, like regular virus scanning and the Authenticator.
Play Safe!
Please remember that account safety and computer security is your responsibility! While WoW.com has provided you with resources to additional information, do your homework and make sure you know what you're doing before installing any antivirus or other software.
What is social engineering? Social engineering is manipulating victims to volunteer personal information about themselves in order to perpetrate a con, scam, fraud, etc. If you have seen the movie Groundhog Day, then you have seen a very good example of it. Phil, a television weatherman, is living the same day over and over. One iteration of his morning, he asks an attractive woman her name, where she went to highschool and her English teacher. The next iteration of his morning, he "accidentally" runs into her and pretends to know her from highschool, resulting in her going to bed with him.
His con works for 3 reasons:
- He seems respectable. He is a well-dressed, articulate, minor celebrity. With this veneer of respectability, he is able to get the initial information and subsequently convince the victim, Nancy, that the forgotten nerd sitting next to her at school has sprouted into a catch.
- The victim sees value in what the con artist is offering. Nancy wants to date a celebrity or at least a successful man and is therefore both available as a victim and incautious with her information and actions.
- The victim is unaware that the information has been stolen. In the case of this movie, she cannot remember any previous iterations of the day.
Your WoW account is under investigation
An email gets sent to one of your email addresses (not necessarily the one you have attached to your WoW account) that says something like: "An investigation of your World of Warcraft account has found strong evidence that the account in question is being sold or traded." The email either asks you to email them your account information or it includes a link to an official looking phishing site designed to steal your info. This is essentially the same scam that has been going on for a while. It comes from what looks like a respectable source, though the only valid email would be wowaccountadmin@blizzard.com without any double "v"s or misspellings. You value protecting your account, so you give your info to this supposedly trusted source. They then use your info to steal your account.
Avoid by: Calling Blizzard directly. If your account is really under investigation, Blizzard will tell you on the phone. For more details, please see this post from Blizzard about fake emails.
In-game mail from a misspelled guildie
You receive mail from a player whose name is spelled very similarly to a guildie or friend -- perhaps with a special character or off by one letter. The mail includes a website to go to for a special deal or to look at a picture or something similar. The site either contains a keylogger or it is a phishing site. Again, when this con works, it is because it is from a source you trust (a guildie), it contains value for you (guildies often send you to interesting websites) and, if you are incautious, you are unaware that your information has been stolen until after it is. This one grabs a lot of active guildmembers because guildies often have hard to spell character names or even alts that are just misspelled versions of their mains.
Avoid by: Verify any in-game mail you get that contain external links by checking your guild roster. Also, you should have an in-guild policy that limits external links to the member restricted area of your guild forums only. In all cases, don't enter your account information unless you go to the Blizzard website directly and scan your computer daily/nightly using any of the freely available virus/malware scans.
Invite/promote request from a misspelled guildie
This one targets your guildbank and not your account. You receive a whisper, from someone who is again spelled very similar to a guildie, to have his alt invited and promoted. The imposter then cleans out your guildbank. You are basically being punished for being a considerate guildie in this situation.
Avoid by: Make sure that all invite requests come from someone in your guild roster. A quick look at your online list will show you if that person is online and will allow you to compare the names. Also, keep a category in your guild hierarchy specifically for alts that does not have access to the valuable tabs in your guildbank. It is only a mild inconvenience for main members to mail their alts anything they need.
Spectral Tiger Mount for sale in tradechat
A high level, server-known player offers up a Spectral Tiger Mount (or any other highly valuable, tradeable in-game loot) for sale at a price that is high enough to be believable, but low enough to be tempting. When contacted, the seller only asks to verify you have the gold before agreeing to send you the code via out of game email. The email contains a code and a link to a phishing site. Your account is then hacked, cleaned out and used to scam the next person. This scam gains a lot of credibility by using hacked accounts that are high level to conduct the transaction. A lot of otherwise careful players are taken in because the excitement of a great deal causes them to be incautious. For further information on this scam, read an interview with one of the actual scammers.
Avoid by: Always be extra careful when a deal seems too good. While there are legitimate sellers of these valuable items at good deals, they will usually conduct the transaction in-game. Again, only go to the Blizzard account sites directly -- never click a link in an email.
Helpful links in the comments and forums
Some of the links in the official forums and the comments here at WoW.com have been put there specifically by shady social engineers to lure unsuspecting readers into a trap. The links go to sites that contain keyloggers that download while you are loading the site. Or they are phishing sites designed to steal your information. We delete the comments that contain them when we catch them, but we don't always catch them.
Avoid by: It is safest to never click on a link in the comments or forums. But if you think it is to a trusted site, then type in the address manually, just to be safe.
Goldsellers and leveling services
Captain Obvious laughs at players who are surprised to learn that the underhanded companies offering services that are against the ToS are the same ones who are hacking accounts. Where else do you think the gold is coming from? The easiest marks for these companies are the people who use their own services, since they are voluntarily giving their information and Blizzard won't protect them.
Avoid by: Don't buy gold! Seriously. Earning gold and leveling your characters get easier with each patch. And if you think that goldbuying is a victimless activity, just scroll up and re-read. These scams wouldn't exist if there weren't a market for their stolen goods.
WoW scammers (and the most common real world criminals) need your cooperation to get your account info, so the biggest hole in your account security is you. Protect your personal data at all times. And use safety nets for when you make mistakes, like regular virus scanning and the Authenticator.
Play Safe!
Filed under: Analysis / Opinion, Account Security
Patch 5.3 interview with Ghostcrawler
Mystery of the Unborn Val'kyr
The latest patch 5.3 news
All of the latest Mists of Pandaria news






Reader Comments (Page 3 of 6)
Furydeath Jun 12th 2009 5:32PM
I always get the Your WoW account is under investigation on my NON WoW account email..and the web site they tell you to go to doesn't even work XD
RogueJedi86 Jun 12th 2009 6:38PM
Same here, I always laugh when I get phishing/scam e-mails sent to my hotmail inbox. I have yet to EVER see a non-Blizzard-official WoW e-mail sent to the e-mail account I use WoW for. It's funny.
Ultranator Jun 12th 2009 7:28PM
I don't have to worry about these sort of scams because I rarely ever check my email account.
Nemicus Jun 12th 2009 5:35PM
We had someone try to pull the officer bank alt scam.. but that officer was on their real bank alt at the time, so we caught them hehe.
ivyleaves Jun 12th 2009 8:26PM
As an officer or guild master, or anyone with the power to invite or promote, I always require and ingame whisper from a main with the name of the alt before they log to an alt and ask for a guild invite. If you don't do that, you are not invited and you surely will not get promoted.
Rimefang Jun 12th 2009 5:38PM
To be exact-- the definition of social engineering is broader than the description provided. Social engineering involves manipulating people towards some end, any end; it doesn't have to be nefarious. The negative connotation comes about primarily because people (and the media) tend to talk only about the types of social engineering that are negative.
As an example, you could argue that DKP loot systems are social engineering. They provide an incentive for your guildies to come and participate in raids and provide officers some level of influence/control by being able to dock DKP as punishment.
Newchron Jun 12th 2009 5:39PM
Good people don't take advantage of stupid people.
TEJ Jun 12th 2009 6:09PM
Stupid people deserve to be taken advantage of.
Zuma Jun 12th 2009 6:21PM
Care to expand on that TEJ?
People always seem use that as justification, they never explain why.
TEJ Jun 12th 2009 6:31PM
@Zuma
Of course. Here's an example.
Consider the gambling industry. The chances of winning the lottery are astronomical - the probability to get struck by lightning is higher. Yet people fill out tickets week by week. These people usually have little to no clue in statistics and probability. Ergo they do not realize the futility of their actions and therefore act stupid. Thus casino operators, lottery organizers, etc take advantage of these people. These people [ticket fillers] actively give their money with infinitely small probability of getting it back.
In-game analogy: Remember why casinos were banned? Other than state/national regulations regarding online gambling, the reason was stupid people who willingly traded money to a total stranger only to /roll (with an expected low probability) for a chance to "double" their bets.
Note: I don't scam in any way because I'm decent enough to make my money by other means. However I don't jump at people who take money from stupid people.
Draenors Jun 12th 2009 6:46PM
TEJ:
I guess your points is somewhat valid. However, I think there might be a major difference: Even if one could argue that the people using the casinos aren't completely aware of what they're spending their money on, at least they do know the basics of it, they do know that their chance of winning is low. The people who get scammed in WoW did not accept those terms, they are completely getting scammed.
As an example, even if we assume that running a casino is stealing, I wouldn't say it's the exact same as secretly stealing someone's wallet.
Magresda Jun 12th 2009 6:50PM
@Tej
That argument is flawed.
In the gambling industry you place your bet knowing that you run a rather high risk of not getting a return on your investment. More traditional gambling (i.e not slot machines) also rely on a good part of skill (card games such as poker).
In a lottery you are also deliberately signing up for a chance to win money, you are not getting scammed. One could say that the odds of winning are so small it's practically throwing money away, but then again, every week you see people winning the lottery and getting their lives turned upside down. It's all part of marketing and yes - social engineering.
It is however not comparable to scams like the spectral tiger scam. One might forget that a large portion of the WoW player base only uses their computer for Facebook and WoW. I have raided with highly skilled players who don't know how to install addons without a client.
All of these people aren't "stupid", they are simply uninformed. When they receive a perfectly legit-looking e-mail telling them their account is banned, they won't know better. That doesn't make it right to steal from them.
And of course, there's a large amount of kids playing WoW. I won't even touch on that one...
cynmoon Jun 12th 2009 6:53PM
@TEJ
That's not so much stupidity as it's weighing risk vs reward. What the risk in spending $1 and getting nothing vs the reward of spending $1 and winning $1 million? There's no risk of spending $1 a week (or whatever lotteries are nowadays). Low risk vs high reward. I used to lose more money than that in change (remember change? The stuff that used to jingle in your pockets? I'm too young to feel this old)
Casinos are the same. Go in knowing you're going to spend that money. My fiance loves craps. He enjoys playing the game. He goes in knowing he's going to spend x amount of dollars. If he walks out with more (which he usually does, that lucky bastard) then awesome for him. If he ends up spending it all, well, then that was the plan anyway, wasn't it?
We're all spending money to play a game here, and if you're paying it you must believe that the reward of playing is more than the risk of not having that $14.99 a month.
Casinos are offering a service that people are asking for, and the amount of money people spend is up to them. Scammers and hackers don't. They offer you a service you're asking for, but don't give that to you. And that's where the problem lies, isn't it?
yeochris Jun 12th 2009 6:12PM
I wonder how many people clicked on that link......
cs Jun 12th 2009 6:14PM
One thing I've seen lately is getting flooded with requests to join my guild from level 1's. The first one I thought was genuine, so gave him the usual spiel about how we needed a druid/shaman/priest or whatever he was, and to talk to me or the other guild officers when he was at least over 20.
Didn't get a response for five minutes, then got a new invite request from another level 1, using the exact same wording as the first. The requests were pretty reasonably worded so I could see how someone, who hadn't seen the request before, might be fooled into thinking it was a genuine newbie, or someone's alt, looking for a group.
I should have invited him, just to hear how much the scammer would have whined and begged when he found he could look but not touch anything in the guild bank.
Draenors Jun 12th 2009 6:17PM
When you talk about "stupid people", you must remember that we are all stupid. We are all getting tricked, scammed and manipulated all the time. You might know how to avoid getting scammed in WoW, but do you know how to avoid all the other scams in life? I suppose you could argue that with all the scamming going on everywhere, WoW-scammers aren't the great evils of society, but that doesn't justify their actions.
craig Jun 12th 2009 6:35PM
Get a mac your IQ goes up x3 right after purchase.
RogueJedi86 Jun 12th 2009 6:43PM
But your unheeded arrogance also goes up 3x too.
You can get scammed even if you have a Mac. You can get e-mails on Mac, you can login to WoW on Mac. Only 1 of the 6 listed scam methods involved keyloggers(which would probably be PC-specific if any of them could be), the rest involved getting info from you willingly. Having a Mac doesn't make you immune to scams.
TEJ Jun 12th 2009 6:46PM
Getting a Mac also casts an undispellable debuff: "Unable to shut the fuck up how macs are great".
What the person above me said too. It doesn't make you immune to scams.
Eddy Jun 12th 2009 7:12PM
It does limit keyloggers, though, which (in my experience) are the sneakiest. Its a nice bonus to your security (though I think it only remains a nice bonus as long as a small percentage of WoW players use them.)