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
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Reader Comments (Page 5 of 6)
Derek Jun 12th 2009 7:43PM
I know, those psychic scammers are the worst! One time, I was so CAREFUL with my account info, that a psychic scammer opened a portal not only into my mind, but into my FUTURE mind. He stole my account info in the year 2014 (in which my main and all my alts are going to be level 120, with full Tier 25 armor and maxed-out profs), mailed all my BoE epics to some guy from a country that doesn't exist yet, disenchanted all my soulbound AND account-bound items (including 15 Legendary items!), mailed all the gold to yet another guy, changed my character names to profanities, and then left my toons cold, naked, and shivering somewhere in Winterspring. Then, just to be more of an ass, he took screenshots and mailed them to me here in the past, just to hurt me more!
Superphail is right! In the future, I will take NO precautions at all, especially not any that sound sensible, like those that WoW.com offers up, so that I'll be extra safe! Taking precautions is always wrong. Scammers say so, so it must be true! Now, if you'll excuse me, a very eloquent young gentleman is coming to sell me the Brooklyn Bridge. Durrr!
oniryuujin Jun 12th 2009 7:19PM
as i won't explain the huge ass ones in urs or supers either Tej
Namy Jun 12th 2009 7:22PM
Superthrust - The purpose of this topic is for the editor to bring popular scams to peoples attention. Not everyone who plays wow is aware of them. He has given sound advice on how to spot scams and how to avoid them. I can't see what part of what he says helps scammers or gives people incorrect information.
I have come across one of these scams in my own guild and the advice he gave was spot on. Luckily I spotted the scam early so we weren't hurt. I hope all my wow playing friends read this thread so they themselves become more aware of the crappy scams out there.
I'm not quite sure what your problem is.
Magresda Jun 12th 2009 7:29PM
Guys, we have a problem... The scamming community of WoW is gonna hack us all, including WoW.com editors and the site itself!
Take a look at this quote by our very own "Superthrust":
"As for the attack. Planning will need to happen. Lulz worthy by hacking their website and changing it to our liking. Lulz worthy by phishing their accounts or scamming the editors.
If we can get enough of A+ people on this, we will be victorious and everyone will soon see that scamming cannot be stopped."
See? WE ARE ALL DOOMED!
No, but seriously. The website in question shall go unnamed, read my comment on page 2 for more info. You'll realize what a bunch of pathetic losers these "scammers" are.
Newchron Jun 12th 2009 7:35PM
You can't compare gambling with scamming. With gambling, there is a chance to win. It may be low but if you win, you get paid. Getting scammed is like trying to buy something but after you pay, you receive nothing AND you get your wallet stolen.
TEJ Jun 12th 2009 7:43PM
Don't you agree that either way stupid people get their money taken away?
Nina Jun 12th 2009 7:50PM
A note about "alts" clearing out the guild vault.
In out guild, 'Alt' is actually the lowest rank in the guild. Alts only have access to the 'Free for all' tab in the gv which holds random low level mats, armor, and consumables. This is a fail safe, not only against scammers, but sometimes our own guildies. If someone's account gets hacked (knock on wood), the scammer can't clear out the gv with all of their alts that have access to the expensive mats; they'll only be able to grab a few stacks of eternals or BoE items. Not nearly as devistating.
oniryuujin Jun 12th 2009 7:56PM
Tej i will agree with u gambling is a stupid way to spend one's money, however you can't compare it to scamming. With gambling there's always that one chance someone will hit it big, the odds are low yes, but the chance and payout is still there. So tell me what's the payout for someone who got scammed? I haven't come across any stories on scammers goin on lets sat their 578th victim saying "Hey i'll leave 15k gold".
Newchron Jun 12th 2009 7:57PM
It happens but it doesn't make it right.
Namy Jun 12th 2009 8:04PM
You're talking about normal real-life people here who log in to play a game they enjoy. Not stupid, just regular people. Too trusting maybe, even naive but does this mean they deserve to be punished? If your answer is yes then you need to take a long hard look at the kind of person you are.
Some people in my guild are kids, do they deserve to be punished for not yet realising that there are thieves out there in a GAME they are playing?
TEJ Jun 12th 2009 9:15PM
They cannot be punished for playing the game, obviously. They should be punished for acts of excessive stupidity.
Like entering your account information on a phishing site despite the million warnings not to.
Age does not absolve not using common sense, folks.
Draenors Jun 12th 2009 9:42PM
There are millions of warnings about everything in the world, but you are still going to fail every single one of them.
John Jun 12th 2009 9:56PM
Tej, if it's a case of people stupidity then why do scammers go to all kinds of lengths to make thier scam look as legit as possible? To try to fool an educated person into a false sense of security. A stupid person would fall for a page that say enter your info here to get your account stolen, an educated person MIGHT enter there info on a page that is deceptively designed to look like the actual warcraft site.
Microtonal Jun 13th 2009 1:39AM
@ TEJ:
"They should be punished for acts of excessive stupidity."
This, friends, is what a sociopath looks like.
TEJ Jun 13th 2009 7:19AM
Not at all. I just think Darwin needs to work some more.
Killchrono Jun 14th 2009 1:19AM
Rofl @ TEJ for bringing Darwin into this. You know what the stupid thing about Darwinst arguments are? The whole point of a society is to nullify and overcome the problems presented in survivial of the fitest. Government, law enforcement, communities exist for the sole reason of enabling people to live safe, comfortable lives without threat of coming under attack from predators. In this kind of structure, people have a right to pay for a service without it becoming comprimised, whether it be through their own stupid mistakes, the malicious intent of others, or a combination of both. WoW, as an online game that is regulated and that people pay to enjoy, is no different.
The bottom line is the safety and security of others, regardless how stupid or naive they are.
If you don't want to be respectful of others rights, then GTFO of society and go hunt some panthers in the wild. Then we can see some REAL Darwinism at work.
Gama Jun 12th 2009 8:48PM
I just want to point out that even though these scammers claim that they are only targeting "stupid" people with scams that can be easily avoided, the scams are becoming increasingly cunning and devious, which suggests to me the opposite. Scams are becoming more complicated in nature to target more cautious people. And as these scammers have seemed to analogize, uncautious = stupid, cautious = smart. Ugh.
And people, let's keep the issue straight here. You can compare these scams to gambling, leaving your house unlocked, whatever, but you're only analogizing a legally reprehensible crime with a scenario designed to make the victims look like total idiots and not like victims. That's not gonna cut it because that's dodging the issue. The fact is that these scams target vulnerabilities, not "stupid people."
Magma Jun 12th 2009 10:32PM
Stop saying hacked. No ones account has ever been hacked. Logging in with stolen information is not akin to hacking.
Colin Jun 12th 2009 11:01PM
i bought gold once, but now that i know where their gold is coming from i'll definitely never do so again. i guess it should have been obvious that wowmine was a bunch of scammers since they often try to scam even the people buying their gold.
Alchemistmerlin Jun 13th 2009 1:31AM
Hope you choke on that smug, buddy.