China bans gold farming

Gold farmers! They're everywhere, right? We get spammed by them, we run into them farming Dire Maul, we put them on ignore. Lazy people with too much disposable income buy gold from them in a show of crass consumerism. Blizzard has done their best to stamp out gold-farming services, but litigation is difficult due to the fact that most of the major gold-farming companies are based in China or other parts of Asia. They've instead opted to try to control and stop gold farmers from being able to complete transactions via other methods.
This time, though, it looks like Blizzard may have an unlikely ally in, of all things, the Chinese government. They announced today that the trading of virtual goods for real money is now illegal in China. This ruling reaches farther than just gold farming, though. It also bans the sale of prepaid time cards for MMOs or other online games, as well as numerous technicalities we're sure to hear about in the weeks to come.
To give you an idea of how much an economic impact this will have on China, gold farming alone generates nearly one billion dollars a year worldwide, with China's specific numbers growing at a reported rate of 20% per year. It's estimated that 80 to 85 percent of gold farmers reside in China, so this ruling is massive and, to be frank, pretty troubling.
From a gamer's perspective, yes, it'll be nice to worry about this kind of service a little less, but from a human perspective this places hundreds of thousands of Chinese people in one of two kinds of serious trouble: the first is financial hardship from the "honest" gold-farming companies that will close down after this ban, and the second is legal issues from the companies who don't close down because they can't afford not to do what they've been doing.
It's not my intention to defend gold farming as an industry, because I used to have to deal with its more nefarious effects every day -- compromised accounts stripped of gold and gear, keyloggers, disruptive spam, all of that. But life isn't easy for many Chinese people working jobs like this. Many gold farming centers are much cleaner and safer, in relative terms, than other places in China where one on the bottom rung of the financial ladder might seek work, so while I appreciate the change as only a white first-world male can, I worry about what will happen to the underprivileged working-class Chinese people behind the spam ads and dead gnomes when this law starts getting enforced.
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Reader Comments (Page 4 of 4)
noelkytty Jun 30th 2009 12:05AM
How do you steal that which does not exist?
bluexxiii Jun 30th 2009 12:23AM
........ OK, Let's let the gold farmers log on to your account, strip all of your characters naked, vendor all of the gear, sell everything in your inventory, bank, guild bank, then transfer your character so they can sell all the gold to someone for 10 bucks, and tell me you don't feel stolen from. It's not the pixels, is the time and effort.
noelkytty Jun 30th 2009 12:46AM
How about people stop "letting them" log onto their accounts? That you even suggested I "let them" do as you typed shows you or any of the victims don't care about your account OR COMPUTER enough to secure it properly.
Use an authenticator, if possible [I don't, but I don't need it - see the reasons below]
Use the same [or even better, more complicated] password rules that even the crummiest I.T. department would require of a network user.
Make your password difficult, and don't share it.
Here is another good rule to follow: approach any mail from "Blizzard" with incredulity.
Don't click on links in e-mail.
Don't visit websites with pornography or warez.
Don't visit gold selling websites, or websites that offer tricks or hacks for WoW.
Common sense not only shuts down the social engineering that these hackers use to get your password, but also works great as trojan/virus/keylogger deterrents.
bluexxiii Jun 30th 2009 12:56AM
This i can get behind 100%.
If you get compromised, 99% of the time, it's your own damn fault. And that 1% of the time when it's not your fault, it's the fault of someone who used the same computer.
That being said, I still don't think it's ok to prey, and profit on another persons ignorance, and (god, never thought I'd say this) I am happy that the Chinese government has made this decision.
Ted Jun 30th 2009 1:54AM
The honest fact is you gotta be on your toes w/ the technical lockdown. And boy, does it suck doing so. You know, carrying around a physical momento of your virtual life to unlock it and all.
Shryndael Jun 30th 2009 12:18AM
The people stealing accounts aren't necessarily Chinese, although I expect some Chinese people do that. To lump all gold sellers in with account thieves and phishers isn't entirely fair - but probably not too far off.
kittywampus Jun 30th 2009 1:58AM
this whole thing can be compared to the scene in clerks... the dialogue about the contractors on the death star... the people in the employ of gold farmers knew it was shady business, they took the risk... and when they are out on their asses, it's them paying for it...
mahotsukaii Jun 30th 2009 2:10AM
rather think its BS that my previous comment was pulled so ill say it again. i dont feel sorry for a black market economy. its like feeling sorry for the mafia. what they did was illegal and against the ToS. its like feeling sorry for the mafia because they made selling drugs illegal. QQ moar and get over it. im glad it happened. good riddance.
Spazmoose Jun 30th 2009 2:10AM
I doubt that the sale of pre-paid time cards are going to be considered illegal, because those cards are not tied to a virtual good, so to speak. Those cards are tied directly to the play time which is a real life product. Making the pre-paid cards illegal would be no different than making the purchase of play time via Blizzard's website illegal. The only difference would be that you have a tangible product (pre-paid card) vs. a paid for account.
However, I can see the sale of the trading card codes being outlawed, because you are paying for the code to a non-tangible code (which returns a virtual good).
Difahrint Jun 30th 2009 2:12AM
None of this will matter come three months time. By my guess the farmers who are dependent on this for a living will either succumb to what they did prior to farming for a living or move to another country within China's reach. And again by my guess it'll probably be a small company that could care less like Brunei or even something like Singapore if they're rich enough to live there. IF these farmers are that dependent on it since the economy in China is having troubles of its own. China has their own set of problems that make this little issue seem insignificant and minute and I'm not surprised it took them this long to do something about the Chinese gold farmers.
Endless Jun 30th 2009 4:25AM
To quote my favourite movie:
- "Don't believe them. Don't trust them."
- "They're dying."
- "Let them die!"
Sothe Jul 1st 2009 1:43AM
First off....go china.
Second, I don't think those people displaced in jobs from this should worry....
Now is their opportunity to get a real job.