In Response to "Gamers Beware"

16 posts · 2008-03-19 11:18:10 to 2008-05-08 08:17:48

#36300427263 03/19/2008 11:18:10 In Response to "Gamers Beware"

Original thread found in Announcements.

Response : If this game was popular, I'd worry SMILEY

#36300427264 03/19/2008 11:20:04 Re:In Response to "Gamers Beware"
ok, thank you.

The general rules about what not to do with your account info is really just a general "what not to do" with any password info anywhere. I'm not too worried.
#36300427266 03/19/2008 11:24:17 Re:In Response to "Gamers Beware"
To me its nothing new, If you play World of Warcraft theres always some scam going on to get your account information and details.
#36300427273 03/19/2008 11:33:40 Re:In Response to "Gamers Beware"

I've read about this.  Most of the targeted sites are aimed at "one handed" surfers! SMILEY

Still, I think it's a poor showing to actually have to tell people again and again how to use common sense with their passwords!

#36300427279 03/19/2008 11:40:48 Re:In Response to "Gamers Beware"
And nearly every "hack" and keylogger comes from a site that exploits some Internet Explorer or Windows vulnerability. Hopefully most people here are savvy enough to avoid IE like the plague and only visit sites they trust.
#36300427288 03/19/2008 11:50:50 Re:In Response to "Gamers Beware"
Symmetric wrote:
And nearly every "hack" and keylogger comes from a site that exploits some Internet Explorer or Windows vulnerability. Hopefully most people here are savvy enough to avoid IE like the plague and only visit sites they trust.
Oh, so I shouldn't go to lolilogurpasswordz.com? SMILEY
#36300427297 03/19/2008 12:01:04 Re:In Response to "Gamers Beware"
The post did say popular games

We're Popular? SMILEY  When did this happen?!
#36300427316 03/19/2008 12:31:26 Re:In Response to "Gamers Beware"
MetaLogic wrote:
The post did say popular games

We're Popular? SMILEY  When did this happen?!

3 years ago.
#36300427368 03/19/2008 13:14:55 Re:In Response to "Gamers Beware"
So the question is..... how do you know if your infected and how do you get rid of it if you are... Since I notice neither of those articles mentioned any virus software that would detect it.

#36300427381 03/19/2008 13:35:48 Re:In Response to "Gamers Beware"

Never use the same password on two different things and regularly change your passwords and you should be fine.

EDIT: Obviously keep your Anti-Virus and Spy-Wear scanner updated and perform regular scans too.

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#36300427703 03/19/2008 23:48:01 Re:In Response to "Gamers Beware"
any decent software firewall will warn you the first time a new program tries to send outgoing data.

Sygate Personal Firewall FTW (before Symantec bought them and messed it up)
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#36300431530 03/26/2008 05:03:37 Re:In Response to "Gamers Beware"
It doesn't have much to do with the popularity of the game, to be honest.  SMILEY

Password scams are usually designed to collect all passwords, allowing the scammer to pick and choose which ones are worth anything and which ones to discard into the trash heap.  A growing trend right now is to obtain game passwords to MMO's, regardless of title/publishing company.  In one instance (I'd link you if I had one, but I'll keep an eye out and see if I can't obtain a link) the popular trend of LCD picture frames became an infection source to at least 10,000 unsuspecting users.

Essentially, what happened was that someone in the manufacturing plant with access to the software that is loaded onto those LCD picture frames, planted a trojan into the software that made it's way into 10k units before they were packaged and shipped to stores to be sold.  When those frames were purchased, brought home by their new owners, and plugged into the USB ports of the owner's respective computers, it instantaneously uploaded the trojan, infecting the computers.

From here, the trojans went to work, collecting passwords to transmit back to the culprit responsible.  And if you think about it, if this can happen to something as non-threatening as a newly purchased LCD picture frame, image what else it could be done with.  How many things do you plug into your computer daily?  iPods, PDA's, cellular phones, digital cameras, etc.  The truth is that any of them could be infected with a password-seeking trojan, and not only would you not necessarily know it, there'd be no way for you to know.

It's become a racket to gain illegal access to another person's MMO account, sell off all of the items in their inventory that are tradable, and put the information/gold/credits up on eBay.  When that sells and the character has been gutted in terms of goods, then they put the account itself up on eBay and make their profit off of it.  Go to eBay sometime and look at just how much accounts are going for, for SOE games, that have XP-capped characters on the account.

If someone wants to do this to you bad enough, they will do it.  SOE's just being kind enough to give you a heads up, and try to keep you from doing something stupid to insure it will happen.

#36300449694 05/01/2008 16:16:41 Re:In Response to "Gamers Beware"
*Puts on tin foil hat* o.o
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#36300450494 05/03/2008 18:52:49 Re:In Response to "Gamers Beware"
Ubershank wrote:
*Puts on tin foil hat* o.o
isnt that for aliens? >_>
#36300452214 05/08/2008 08:17:48 Re:In Response to "Gamers Beware"
ChloeAnn wrote:
Ubershank wrote:
*Puts on tin foil hat* o.o
isnt that for aliens? >_>
It's the mark of a true paranoid SMILEY
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