How to tell if a GM is whispering you

Let's dissect the above whisper:
- It's one whisper made to look like two. This will work if your chat settings match the scammer's chat settings, but if you've fiddled with your font or chat window, then the formatting will be off and the scam will be more obvious.
- The whisper is from a garbage name. All "players" I've seen with random characters have been scammers or gold selling barkers. So anything after such a name should be considered highly suspect.
- It says [Game Master]GM. The scammers aren't even trying here. Blizzard GMs have names and have <GM> before their names.
- It sends you to a non-Blizzard site. Don't go to any website you get in tells or in-game mail as a general rule. If you have received a ban of any kind, you will receive an email to the account you have on file with your subscription info.
Now, this is what it looks like when a GM is actually whispering you [Edited to reflect current GM chat.]:
Notice the differences:
- The GM has an intelligible name. It's an actual name, not random letters and not just GM or Game Master.
- The syntax is BLIZZ[Name]. There is now a BLIZZ logo next to the GM's name, which is in brackets.
- There's no whisper from a stranger right above it. The scammer could use someone's stolen account, so an incomprehensible name is not a guaranteed method of identifying a perp.
- GM chat pops up in its own window. This is important because there has been at least one case where a GM accidentally left a BLIZZ logo on a non-GM player. This allowed the player to chat with a logo next to his character's name for a while.
Reminder: If you get an email from Blizzard, please make sure it is really from Blizzard before you click on anything in it. The best way to do this is to call their support line (link goes to Blizzard's global support listings). If there is anything up with your account, they will confirm it. If not, they will direct you in how to report the email you received.
Of course, if no one bought gold, it would not be profitable for scammers to spend the time sending you in-game messages and out-of-game emails. And with how easy it is to make money in Azeroth these days, I really don't understand why anyone would support hackers in this way. But people are still buying gold and therefore, the rest of us must be constantly vigilant against account thieves.
Filed under: Analysis / Opinion, Account Security
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Reader Comments (Page 3 of 4)
Muse Feb 4th 2010 9:04PM
The day I get hacked it will be because it was Monday morning and I hadn't had my caffeine yet.
PeeWee Feb 4th 2010 9:20PM
Famous last Words, Muse
^^
Gamer am I Feb 4th 2010 9:01PM
I once got one of those whispers while doing dailies in Icecrown. I knew it was bogus because of the whisper above it and the non-Blizzard-ness of the link (and the fact that he told me my account was suspended, while I was still playing) and I reported the guy to a GM, but that was when it really hit me; hackers were targeting ME! And that's the story of why I bought an authenticator.
Muse Feb 4th 2010 9:03PM
That, and GMs tend to write, type and spell properly. But they do occasionally make typos. So while you can be sure that a "GM" writing "hi r u there?" is a scammer, having one or two mistakes in there isn't a sure tell.
Karuna Feb 4th 2010 10:36PM
Ha, on ive spoken to gms on rp realms where the gm is actually fairly in character. Dunno if thats normal but kinda makes it easy to spot the difference.
Taytayflan Feb 4th 2010 9:13PM
Ahh, the Death Grip glitch.
Cyprin Feb 4th 2010 9:16PM
:o!
I'm the guildie in question here.
Glad I could help!
Robin Torres Feb 4th 2010 9:58PM
It's true!
Thanks, Cyprin!
Nawaf Feb 4th 2010 10:03PM
Someone tried to hack me through my email a few days ago. It said in the email that my password changed through the password recovery process, and that I should go to worldofwarcraft.com to change it back if I want to. It was an obvious hack attempt because of:
1) I use a European account. We use wow-europe.com.
2) At the first email, the link appeared to be wordofwarcraft.com, but when I hover the mouse over it, it shows that it was wow-blizzard-admin.com or something like that.
3) In the second email, the link was worldofwarcalft.com (notice the l before ft).
4) It was in my junk mail.
Instead of pressing the link, I went to wow-europe and checked the password (not changed).
Be careful from hacks. My friend got hacked twice. Once by pressing a link in the in-game mail. The second time he was an idiot and was tired of leveling, so he said something in the general channel, and that was his account name and password with a leveling request.
Any way, you'll feel really stupid if you got hacked in any way.
GeekNoire Feb 5th 2010 11:23AM
"Instead of pressing the link, I went to wow-europe and checked the password (not changed). "
^This^
If I have any doubt at all about a link sent to me in an email (which is almost always since I'm paranoid from working IT security), I do NOT click the link and instead go directly to the site to check the validity of whatever the email stated. Only one out of dozens (maybe more) of emails have been legit.
A little paranoia in online interactions can be a good thing.
SINisterWyvern Feb 6th 2010 4:49AM
Please be sure to help Blizzard destroy these people by forwarding the full headers to hacks@blizzard.com!
I've been sending them daily out of my spam folder =/
Nawaf Feb 6th 2010 8:32AM
Can't. Already deleted all three messages.
Utakata Feb 4th 2010 10:29PM
I wonder if the bottom sample looked like the ones the members of Ensidia recieved over in the last 24. :)
Wolfcat Feb 4th 2010 10:39PM
I got that message yesterday. I didn't think it was real, but had my husband come over for a second opinion as well. I then obviously didn't go checking it out and reported it. I've gotten two in-game mails for the same site telling me to come and claim a prize or something. That was 2-3 weeks ago. It's really quite irritating.
RogueJedi86 Feb 4th 2010 10:55PM
I know one surefire way to tell if it's a GM whispering you. When you see the whisper, hit R, reply to them, see if it goes to Random McRandomname, or a GM. Also, get an addon that shows chat timestamps, instant destruction of ANY impersonations of any kind. The impersonation won't have the timestamps.
And here's a suggestion to Blizz, though I'm sure it'd be a lot of work. They should have a bunch of GMs just spend a few days/weeks messaging all the active players. All they have to say is "This is just a whisper from your local Game Master, showing you what a legit whisper from a GM looks like. Notice the blue in front of my name, and the fact that my conversation with you is in its own separate window. Just keep those telltale signs in mind the next time someone whispers you impersonating a GM. Take care, be safe"
It's a lot of work, but it could help for the people who are a bit........let's call them naive.
Ellie Feb 4th 2010 11:05PM
I know 2 people who got hacked.
One was my 11 year nephew who has absolutely no critical sense when it comes to nice people offering him gold or cool free items and is also lazy. He'll take the easy way out every time and he thought buying a bit of gold would be a good way to spend his pocket money. He needed gold to pay for boosts to get to lvl 80 fast.
He would probably fall for something like the above scam as well, simply because he wouldn't be able to keep a cool head. "OMG I got banned, what did I do? I'll click that link to find out".
This is actually the 2nd time he got hacked. First time was because he shared his account info with friends. They were all playing on each others account and sharing passwords and somewhere in that chain there was a broken link.
His dad has now bought an authenticator for him and force-fed it to him.
The other was a guild mate of my husband who collected everything the game has to offer. Mounts, pets, achievements... you name it, she'd want it. But she didn“t want to put in the time grinding gold, so she bought some. And got hacked. Stupid thing was: she was an officer of the guild, so the guild bank was gone as well.
I think these 2 people are representative of most of the "getting hacked"-crowd in WOW. Either someone who is too young, stupid or lazy to understand or care what they are doing or someone who feels a need to get gold gold gold for the expensive in-game treats. It's true that it's easy to make money in Azeroth these days, but there are a lot of gold sinks out there as well and if you don't feel you have the time (or am too lazy), I guess buying gold seems like a good idea.
NecDW4 Feb 4th 2010 11:17PM
God, some of the mouth breathers that fall for these things should just take a magnet to their HD.
Creese5704 Feb 4th 2010 11:52PM
back on madoran, during a raid I saw a GM outside asking to observe lol I knew it was a GM because they were of opposite faction could talk to us, and the game had before it above their head not in whisper. Was really cool. It was cool he danced with us too. Had fun with screenshots lol.
Creese5704 Feb 5th 2010 12:04AM
that didnt type out right accidentally used html codes on accident. the word GM was before their name. in brackets. Not like in whispers but on their name
Creese5704 Feb 5th 2010 12:05AM
accidentally used html codes* Not accidentally used html codes on accident