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Account hacked Gold stolen - Blizzard won't refund
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Post by
973701
This post was from a user who has deleted their account.
Post by
235435
This post was from a user who has deleted their account.
Post by
973701
This post was from a user who has deleted their account.
Post by
SoCalWoWGal
From the information that you are presenting it seems that someone in your household accessed the account. Perhaps a roomate or a sibling? Was your password easy to guess? Did you have an authenticator on the account and kept that authenticator secure as well?
Blizzard, to my knowledge, will not accept any outside "proof" that you may have. Blizzard has all of the records as to what ISP accessed the account and they are saying that it was the same as yours, thus you need to figure out where the breach in security was and take measures to secure your account.
Post by
973701
This post was from a user who has deleted their account.
Post by
SoCalWoWGal
I do not see anything in your post that shows that Blizzard comfirmed anything, other than the account was suspended, an investigation was made and the suspension was overturned.
Thinking completely out of the box here, is it possible that someone was visiting your house that also plays WoW could have accessed your account?
Post by
973701
This post was from a user who has deleted their account.
Post by
973701
This post was from a user who has deleted their account.
Post by
235435
This post was from a user who has deleted their account.
Post by
973701
This post was from a user who has deleted their account.
Post by
235435
This post was from a user who has deleted their account.
Post by
973701
This post was from a user who has deleted their account.
Post by
Jkpman
I understand that my own accounts privacy is my responsibility but as I'm certain the trade was not done by anyone from the household or someone piggy backing to our wifi - I don't know how I could have prevented this action.
Blizzard need to take better steps at stopping hackers and as something like this can completely ruin the game that you love playing.
I'm gonna keep marking the ticket as unresolved until I can get somewhere with this.
They take all steps possible.
As for the WiFi comment, that is entirely possible, Right now I can see a couple of unsecured connections in my building.
When it comes to computer security there is no certainty.
Blizzard know it happened at your house, There is no magic here, someone close to you (proximity) got you a ban.
They are not going to back down on this, so it's pointless for you to keep wasting time and their resources by continuing to put in tickets.
Suck it up, learn your lesson, and either decide to play or not. (250k isn't a massive amount of Gold to recoup these days)
Post by
lonewolfe31705
I understand that my own accounts privacy is my responsibility but as I'm certain the trade was not done by anyone from the household or someone piggy backing to our wifi - I don't know how I could have prevented this action.
Blizzard need to take better steps at stopping hackers and as something like this can completely ruin the game that you love playing.
I'm gonna keep marking the ticket as unresolved until I can get somewhere with this.
They take all steps possible.
As for the WiFi comment, that is entirely possible, Right now I can see a couple of unsecured connections in my building.
When it comes to computer security there is no certainty.
Blizzard know it happened at your house, There is no magic here, someone close to you (proximity) got you a ban.
They are not going to back down on this, so it's pointless for you to keep wasting time and their resources by continuing to put in tickets.
Suck it up, learn your lesson, and either decide to play or not. (250k isn't a massive amount of Gold to recoup these days)
This times everything. You marking a ticket unresolved even though they have repeatedly told you no, is going to do nothing but make the CSR mad because they have to document it every time they talk to you.
I know personally, that if I was a CSR and read that we had solid proof there was no access to your account outside of your normal activites and IP, that we already revoked a perma-ban down to a 48 hour suspension and you were still whining about gold (that you or someone you know/let play your account obviously sold or mailed to someone) , I would tell you in the nicest way possible to stop being a moron and be thankful you still have an account.
All that being said, stop wasting everyone's time over what is just a mediocre amount of gold(I know I make that every week in WoW by playing the AH a few hours a day.) so that the Blizz CSR team can deal with real issues. I know a year ago that my GF's account was hacked, (Blizzard could tell me the exact IP that we had logged into for 6 months straight and then the hackers IP...so yes, they can tell you that it was someone at your house or not who did the transfer) it took Blizz about an hour to return eveything in the gbank, all her stuff, all her gold, and even left the 80 stacks of leather the hacker farmed up.
Post by
Araxom
Hi all, just got back from my first vacation in a looooong time. Apologies for the delayed response.
Firstly, now would be a good time to pitch the
authenticator
and the
SMS Protect
- both are excellent utilities to help protect the accounts. Now, to summarize the notes here - basically, we want to keep our players in the game, however our system can and will lock an account down if it looks like it's being accessed from a location that is not generally in the area of where the account is associated.
Resetting the password
is generally sufficient to get around this. Now, if an account is reported as compromised, we'll do our best to look at the activity on the account and provide the necessary restorations. These are not guaranteed to get an account back in the exact shape it was in, and the sooner the issue is reported, the better shape the account will likely be in after we attend to it.
As was previously stated in the thread, if we cannot verify the account was accessed from another location, then this is considered a domestic compromise, (i.e. shared account). It would not matter if the account owner had knowledge of the issue or not, as we would be unable to verify that either way. I hope that sheds more light on the issue. I'll check back on the post in case there are other questions that I can speak to.
Regards,
Araxom
Blizzard Customer Support
Post by
973701
This post was from a user who has deleted their account.
Post by
ElhonnaDS
It no longer matters as I've quit due to complete dis-satisfaction with Blizz / WOW CS. 250k gold may not seem like a lot to some ppl but to me who has no interest in farming gold and just slowly built up a nice amount over 2.5 years it's a lot. Completely pissed off with Blizzard.
It's not Blizzard's fault because YOUR IP address was the weak link- it has nothing to do with any of their systems. Either someone logged into your account physically at your computer, or your wireless router was compromised and someone was able to access your computer and passwords that way. It doesn't make sense that someone would go through all the work of accessing and cloning your IP for the purposes of stealing 250k gold, because they'd have to do that for every person they hacked, and that's a lot of extra work for not a lot of reward (in the overall scheme of illicit gold trading, 250 k from one person isn't worth that much). If they have proof that it happened from your IP address, then your assurances that it wasn't you isn't sufficient proof for them to restore gold. If every person who ever sold gold, or shared an account, got everything back they "lost" based on their promise that it wasn't them, the economy would be shot to heck and there would be no incentive for anyone to abide by the rules of the TOS/EULA. They can tell it came from your address, or someone logged into your IP, and so it was a favor even to lift the ban.
Imagine it this way. Lets say you're working for Amazon.com, and you have someone who places several expensive orders on their account. The orders go through, and are shipped to the same address the person has used for the last 10 years, and because of the value, all of the sellers used delivery services with proof of delivery requirements- i.e., they all had to be signed for. If the customer called, and said that the last $4000 worth of purchases weren't made by them, and they don't want to pay for them, you'd investigate. If you could tell that all of the items were shipped to and signed for at the same address as the account holder, there is no way that you would refund the money. Because while it is possible that someone unknown to them somehow gained access not only to their credit card info, but also sat in front of their house and intercepted the packages, it's much more likely that they're trying to scam you. And so the one person to whom that actually happened has their request denied because of the 500 other people who are trying to get free stuff. It's not a problem with Amazon's system- it's a matter of most likely scenario, and not letting your business get damaged by letting scammers take advantage on the off chance that someone is in the unlikely situation they claim to be in.
While I'm not encouraging you to not quit the game- you probably should- I'm just informing you that the reason that they won't return your gold is valid, and smart business, and I'd think less of them as a company if they didn't take a stance like this in the face of evidence that it was the same location. If you really did lose it without your knowledge and not to a friend of a sibling who logged in while you were away (which is extremely unlikely, given the information Blizzard says they have) then the lesson you should take from this is not that Blizzard protocols are bad, but that you are doing something very wrong in terms on internet security. Because if someone has that much access to your system, they could steal your credit card and social security info, they could use your cloned IP to download illegal content or have illegal chat conversations (not just pirated stuff- things that would alert the NSA and law enforcement, and land you on MSNBC), use your IP to commit credit card fraud, etc. They could land you in jail, ruin your credit, and/or ruin your life. Whether or not you get your gold back should be the last thing you think about when someone has cloned your IP and has access to your passwords and other information on your computer.
Post by
Jkpman
It no longer matters as I've quit due to complete dis-satisfaction with Blizz / WOW CS. 250k gold may not seem like a lot to some ppl but to me who has no interest in farming gold and just slowly built up a nice amount over 2.5 years it's a lot. Completely pissed off with Blizzard.
Also - lonewolfe31705 if I'm wasting so much of your time with this post then don't bother to comment.
It's like banging your head against a brick wall trying to explain even basics to you.
Your account security lies solely with YOU.
You failed.
You wouldn't leave your bike unlocked outside and then go to the bike store and demand a new one when it got stolen, so stop being an idiot and demanding Blizzard refund items or gold lost on an account you failed to secure.
Post by
pod32
In my
opinion
Blizzard doesn't do enough to prevent account theft and the ugly things that occur
because of it. They say they take a huge stance against the selling of gold or other items that are time consuming or hard to get. These two things are highly related and both should be considered theft in a court of law. The gold sellers are selling a product generated by Blizzard under a copyrighted game and making themselves money without written permission. Plus, has it ever been researched as to how they are obtaining the gold and other in-game items? Multi-boxing, account theft, or other things that Blizzard supposedly says is a no would be my guess. Blizzard seems to only do what they have to and not the littlest bit more. SusanExpress sells wow gold and has done so for years now. If SusanExpress didn't pay for all those accounts and just had one or two I would imagine Blizzard would put an end to the website. But because I love WoW and the negatives are few and far between, I'll keep entering my mobile authenticator code, and changing my password every so often. I've found that along with never buying gold, never believing I randomly won something in-game and all I have to do is enter my account info (lol), and never logging on any public computer to check anything battle.net or Blizzard will prevent a hack. I've been playing since Burning Crusades release and have seen my share of friends get hack-jacked, but taking those VERY EASY precautions I mentioned have saved my account and gold.
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