The Queue: Chongqing

Chongqing is the world's largest municipality by population and one of the largest by area, as well. What I'm saying is it's pretty big, and a lot of people live there. It's also where a lot of account compromises come from.
Potatoboy asked:
Has there ever been any serious talk of a "super officer" or "Jr GM" type guild rank? I'm thinking like the ability to manage bank tabs, repairs/withdrawls etc. This would make it easier (at least in my situation) to turn on/off guild repairs during raid time if the GM wasn't present or on an alt. Would this be useful for anyone else?
It's actually not difficult to create a co-GM rank; the only thing that you can't give permissions for in the interface is controlling guild repairs -- or, obviously, promoting people to guild master. If the only reason you want the rank is to control guild repairs, then you're probably out of luck, but for other administrative purposes, it's possible.
Tarvos asked:
I'm leveling my prot paladin pretty quickly, and would like to see her as a potential back-up tank for my raiding guild. But she's still in the sixties and I've never tanked a raid instance before. What would be some good raids to practice tanking before I hit the ground running at 85?
Low-level raids will teach you next to nothing about tanking, since mobs will die so fast. Start the way Blizzard intends you to start: Run regular dungeons from 80-85, then heroics. Your job doesn't really change when you hit raids, just the encounters.
Uncletouchy asked:
What happens to the perpetrators when accounts are hacked? Does Blizzard track them down and delete the items, ban the account or simply return the items to the victims?
Blizzard has done a great job ensuring that my guildees and I don't suffer lasting harm, but I'd hate to know that the people who stole from us will get off Scot free.
Blizzard has a pretty good system in place for tracking where items and gold from compromised accounts go, so obviously they're "recovered" from the accounts that benefit from your compromise. The issue here is that most compromise attacks don't come from the United States, and even if they did, it's a long battle to try to enforce a EULA in U.S. court. Admittedly, I'm much less familiar with the workflow now than I was years ago, but I think it's safe to assume that cops aren't beating down the doors of the guy in Chongqing who compromised you.
So Blizzard fights these battles more behind the scenes; it takes away gold from people who bought it from the guy who compromised you, it watches IP addresses that are more prone to being malicious, and it tries to make it harder for you to be compromised by educating you on account security and telling you to buy a damn authenticator.
Shaukhu asked:
Why are orcs such as Orgrim Doomhammer, Durotan, Draka, Drek'thar, and the rest of the Frostwolf clan portrayed as green-skinned? None of them drank the blood of Mannoroth - Doomhammer due to being suspicious of the deal, and the rest due to being warned by Ner'zhul - yet they are still rendered and portrayed with green skin, as opposed to the brown skin of the Mag'har (due to also being uncorrupted by Mannoroth's blood). Furthermore, since Thrall is the son of Durotan and Drake (two uncorrupted orcs), he should also have brown Mag'har skin, yet remains green...any thoughts?
Commenter Samutz answered this pretty well:
Brown orcs can gain the green pigmentation after extreme exposure to fel energies, not just from drinking the blood. This happened to most of the orcs when the original Horde's shamans started becoming warlocks. The color is genetic after that, which is how Thrall and other younger orcs have the green skin too.
In the current Horde, warlocks are frowned upon and aren't as dominate as they once were. There's not enough fel energy in the air to affect Garrosh apparently.
Filed under: The Queue






Reader Comments (Page 1 of 8)
Silversol May 14th 2011 1:05PM
I guess times are a Chongquing. /badpun /leaves in shame
Silversol May 14th 2011 1:06PM
*wearing fake nose/glasses/mustache mask*
Geez, you even didn't copy the spelling from the title of the page correctly, you fail!
Nathanyel May 14th 2011 1:07PM
I immediately thought of Shrek 2 (or was it Shrek 1?)
Nathanyel May 14th 2011 1:06PM
While statistics agree with you, isn't that a little racist?
anuillae May 14th 2011 1:14PM
I hardly think that saying that a large percentage of hackers come from a certain city is even approaching getting near being remotely racist.
Suzaku May 14th 2011 1:17PM
How exactly is it racist? If I said Detroit has the highest crime rates in the US, would that be racist?
People need to stop trying to find offense in every little thing.
Seriously, stop being so sensitive.
Thallium May 14th 2011 1:20PM
^^
Especially since Sacco didn't ascribe a particular race to the hackers. Gender, yes, so clearly he's sexist (kidding, obviously) but not racist.
JattTheRogue May 14th 2011 1:20PM
What are you referring to being racist? The only thing I can sort of maybe bend a lot to slightly see how someone might possibly consider it racist is him saying most compromised accounts come from Chongqing, but even with all the hypotheticals I have to put myself in to get there, that is not racist in the slightest. It is a simple statistic and doesn't even refer to race. And even if he had come straight out and said "Most people who compromise accounts are Chinese", that's still not racist if the numbers are there to back it up. What is wrong with you? Just mentioning a demographic/race/gender/etc. does not a racist/sexist/bigoted statement make, and people who start accusing others of being racist with no real reason get in the way of reasonable discourse.
Cambro May 14th 2011 1:36PM
Also, "Chinese" is an ethnicity, not a race. Overly sensitive much?
Nitride May 14th 2011 1:42PM
The most offensively offended "Race" in the world are whites, on behalf of every other race.
Now *thats* what I would call racist.
Pizza Pizzaz May 14th 2011 2:17PM
Hah. Let me paraphrase so we all understand the ridiculousness:
"While what you say is true, backed by statistical facts, isn't it wrong to call out a particular group of people to their own wrong doing?"
Darasen May 14th 2011 2:43PM
You must work for MSNBC.
Kurash May 14th 2011 6:06PM
@Darasen
I recall Limbaugh and Beck calling the President a racist. Do they work for MSNBC too?
Regardless of political position, we need more attempts at cross-cultural understanding a lot more than we need accusations of racism traded back and forth.
staffan.johansson May 14th 2011 9:03PM
Everyone's a little bit racist.
It's true.
uncaringbear May 14th 2011 11:48PM
Not that I'm doubting Mr. Sacco's statement, but I would've liked if he had referred to the sources about Chongqing being a prime source for account theft.
Fatherskull May 15th 2011 12:40AM
@staffan.johansson I was gonna use that quote. Love it and its damn true.
gamerunknown May 22nd 2011 8:25PM
Cambro, you were the first person to bring up "China", everyone else inferred that he was referring to "Asians".
Besides, there's nothing wrong with questioning people's stereotypes. It's consciousness raising, as Dawkins puts it.
If you've never reflected on the gender paygap, domestic abuse, institutional racism or the fact that there are countries in the world where 13 year olds have been stoned to death for the crime of being raped, then the consciousness raising has failed.
dk May 14th 2011 1:08PM
"Start the way Blizzard intends you to start: run regular dungeons from 80-85, then heroics. Your job doesn't really change when you hit raids, just the encounters."
I didn't know that, does everyone know that?
Eregos ftw! May 14th 2011 1:25PM
Yes.
anuillae May 14th 2011 1:49PM
Everyone who just read this Queue does.