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I am nervous about being hacked myself. When I put so much time into something, I want to protect myself. However, I still don't understand how people are being hacked all the time. If you stick to a set list of addons and dont follow any weird WoW links, how can you get hacked? |
I got hacked last night (around 21:00 Paris time).
Now im unable to do anything, he/she changed my mail, pw, everything, even removed my account from the battle.net account I own. Blizzard doesnt answer my mail, gm's don't belive my guild mates, the phone numbers to the norwegian blizzard support seems to be dead. Ive already removed the keylogger I found on my harddrive though, and Ive ordered an authenticator. In other words, no more updates of my addons in a while. |
Ugh p3lim, that sucks! :(
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Do you know how you got the keylogger? |
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As far as how, some anti-virus companies don't regard gaming related viruses as anything high priority. Viruses that can affect finances or financial loss due to downtime, business or personal, is what they focus on. My first recomendation is to get a gamer-friendly AV program. AVG, Avast! and Malwarebytes are a few (I use Avast! myself) However, hackers also push hard on the phishing side of things. I use [email protected] as my public addon support email. It gets hammered with phishing attempts. My WoW accounts are associated with an email I mainly use for personal stuff, like friends and family. The phishing attempts are quite good on the surface. They appear to be legit Blizzard emails saying your account is about to be closed and you better log in at some bogus link to enter all your info to verify your identity. The first time I got one of these phishing emails I almost took the bait until I realized that the email was not sent to my WoW account one. Blizzard always emails your regestered email. The business of hacking accounts is very large. It is an industry, not by some unscrupulous geeks who get a thrill of beating security, but by low life get-a-buck-by-any-means people. It is an underground industry that attacks on many fronts. You know those illicit gold selling and power leveling services. They get their invetories from hacked accounts. People may remember when WoW began, they were in-game farmers. Not really true anymore. They now hack accounts and sell the gold back to the players. And if you buy from them, they will leverage what info they know of you to try and hack your account. Sorry about the wall of text :) Just trying to give some info on how this happens. It happens because 1) The hackers are very, very aggressive. 2) Some of the popular AV software out there is slow to ID gaming-targeted viruses. 3) Players unwittingly give away account info, complete or partial. All I have to say really is get an authenticator. If you have an IPhone, you can get a free one as an IPhone app. Otherwise the cost of the authenticator is minimal compared to the experience of being hacked. |
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That sucks, well at least things we fixed after time.
Went ahead and bought my authenticators. |
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Avast found nothing malicious though, as well as Kaspersky. I can't say with 100% certainty that he was hacked from brute force, but it certainly seems like that to me. So my day was given cheer for having someone to call noob and laugh at, irl. Don't buy gold, people, it really doesn't get you ahead at all (and this is not an accusation or a generalization towards those who have been hacked, it's only one experience that is probably not isolated at all). |
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