Billions of ISK, EVE Online's in-game currency, pass through the sandbox MMO's infamous Jita star system every day. Much is spent on legitimate free market trades, but the heart of EVE's simulated economy is clogged with a sticky plaque: career scammers who spend hours spamming local chat with impossibly enticing offers. I'm quitting the game and want to give away all my ISK! Sure, and I'm an Amarrian prince who needs help making a space transfer to fund Half-Life 3. I've always wondered how anyone could fall for these obvious tricks—someone must, because I saw them stacking up in the chat window when I last visited Jita over a year ago, and no one could be that persistent without results. To find out, I flew to Jita like a Las Vegas-bound fool, prepared to be duped out of my life savings—a modest 500 million ISK—in search of EVE's greatest scam. The contract scam These low-effort, inelegant scams are easy to avoid—it's a good idea in life and EVE to read contracts carefully before signing them. The same goes for "give me all your stuff and I'll let you join GoonWaffe!" That is not how you join the Goon's corporation. There's another type of Jita scam, however, that's much more fun. It's a game of trust and lies, where both scammer and victim try to come out ahead. I'm a gambler, and while the plan was to lose money intentionally, I started to wonder if I might turn a profit. Initially, I did. The "double or nothing" Take your isk to a real doubling business! The only legitimate doubling service in EVE. Details in bio. I follow the rules as long as you do. Stop going to scammers, and start bringing your isk here, to the only real doubler not on the list Convo me! I sent the minimum amount, 10 million ISK, to test him. Seconds later, he deposited 20 million ISK in my account. This is how you play the game. The first, timid investment is always returned to foster trust. Now that we're buddies, I'll send 100 million, and he'll block me and log off. I was shocked when he returned 200 million, just as promised. Follow the rules "A surprising amount of people fail [to] follow the rules and i make a big enough profit off of them to pay for the smart players," wrote Iyou. I asked him to clarify the rules, simple requirements for deposit amounts and character age, and he did. "Its not against the rules to confirm the rules lol." "Tell your friends, for referals, if they mention your name and fail to follow the rules you get 10 percent," he wrote. How nice—if I give my friends a bad tip I can earn even more. Never trust anyone in Jita. I left the chat, figuring this was a fluke, or that I was bait, someone who would publicize his generosity to attract more "customers" or decide to profit off his referral system. Then, in local chat, I see a sad message from a character named Bravo Ghost: "Safar Iyou took all my money!" EVE's greatest scam Reedy Cassidy > Still at it, eh? Any luck? Shimaya should take notes from the final scam I encountered. It's diabolical. Not only does this scam—which may be the most successful current EVE scam—effectively convince players to hand over hundreds of millions of ISK at a time, every bite is recorded in a public record. And yet it keeps working, over and over. It starts like the others. Olivia Skylee, Lou Xlejitt, Borderline Nutz, and other aliases are advertising ISK doubling with variations on the following message: I Want to SHARE The Wealth I cannot make all of EVE wealthy Risk = ISK ( I put the ISK in RISK! ) Below that, a payout chart claims those who risk 100 million ISK will receive 700 million, 200 million will receive 2.2 billion, and 500 million will receive a ridiculous 7 billion. The payouts are unbelievable, so to convince those who are about to be scammed, proof is offered. Proof Of Honesty: Using an API, it's possible for third-party websites to track EVE player information, including transactions, which is this scammer's proof of legitimacy. Let's take a look at Borderline Nutz' wallet. It looks like Nutz is keeping his promise, and if you think it's all faked, go ahead and transfer 1 ISK to his account—it will show up on the API page, proving that it's real data. And it is, just not entirely real data. All of the incoming transactions are real, but the payouts are spoofed. This has been going on for at least a few months, possibly longer, with over a billion ISK in profits on a good day. My favorite part: Nutz asks players to place a small bounty on him "as a 'thank you' gesture." So far, he's got over 500M ISK in thank yous on his head. I knew this was a con when I first saw it, but I couldn't help but think about all the ships I could buy with 2.2 billion ISK. I could transfer it to my corporation's wallet, start recruiting and expanding into low-sec space. I sent the 200 million, certain that it was the story I was after, but part of me hoped for the one-in-a-billion chance that this would be another Safar Iyou. Of course, my riches never came. I contacted Nutz, but he refused to talk. And that's how the ISK doubling game works. Teased with the prospect of great wealth, we're willing to risk everything—it's just like Las Vegas, where the house always wins in the end. That is, unless you bring your ISK to a 100 percent legit, real ISK doubling service. Contact Reedy Cassidy to find out more about this one-of-a-kind offer. The post Risk = ISK: Finding EVE Online's most sophisticated scam appeared first on PC Gamer. | |||
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miercuri, 26 iunie 2013
Risk = ISK: Finding EVE Online’s most sophisticated scam g21
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