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EVE Online Rocked by 700 Billon ISK Scam

Posted by Zonk on Wed Aug 23, 2006 05:37 PM
from the that's-a-lot-of-space-tobacco dept.
Martin Spamer writes "The space MMOG EVE Online, where mining rock plays a big part of the economy, has recently been hit by a huge in-game scam. The aftermath of the EIB scam... was 700 Billion ISK, which might raise some $119,000 USD if sold on Ebay. (The current conversion rate is 100M ISK to 18 USD.) These events have prompted claims of player deaths, death threats, and speculation about What Would You Do With 700 Billion ISK?"

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[+] Eve Online's New Chief Economist 52 comments
eldavojohn writes "Recently CCP, the folks behind the online game Eve Online, hired a real world economist to advise them on their in-game economy. Says the new hire, Dr. Eyjolfur Gudmundsson, 'There's a lot of discussion in the game about inflation and that is my job, to find out if inflation is going on. This makes the consumers behave in a more natural way because they are competing against each other on multiple levels, not only on a tactical level in combat but for logistics and resources. That builds consumer behavior and patterns that you see in the real world.' Is this a serious step to keep Eve Online competitive in the virtual land of MMOs despite scandals, Ponzi schemes & scams?"
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  • Er... (Score:3, Insightful)

    by rscoggin (845029) on Wednesday August 23 2006, @05:41PM (#15966161) Homepage
    Can someone explain the scam? The forum link has very little information and presumes the reader has background...
    • Re:Er... by gbrayut (Score:1) Wednesday August 23 2006, @05:44PM
      • Re:Er... by generic-man (Score:3) Wednesday August 23 2006, @07:59PM
      • Re:Er... by Forgery (Score:2) Thursday August 24 2006, @08:37AM
        • Re:Er... by garylian (Score:2) Thursday August 24 2006, @09:38AM
    • Re:Er... (Score:5, Informative)

      by LotsOfPhil (982823) on Wednesday August 23 2006, @05:49PM (#15966203) Homepage
      It took a while, but... [eve-online.com]
      1) Player Cally starts the EVE Investment Bank in early 2006
      2) A lot of drama goes on in the mean time with people sticking up for the EIB and others calling it a scam
      3) Cally's owner decides it's been long enough and cleans out the bank, netting around 700bil in ISK and another 100bil in assets
      That's really all the high points.
      [ Parent ]
      • Re:Er... by rossifer (Score:2) Wednesday August 23 2006, @06:01PM
        • Re:Er... by CosmeticLobotamy (Score:2) Wednesday August 23 2006, @06:29PM
          • Re:Er... by Chosen Reject (Score:1) Wednesday August 23 2006, @09:37PM
          • Re:Er... by CosmeticLobotamy (Score:2) Wednesday August 23 2006, @08:06PM
          • 1 reply beneath your current threshold.
    • Re:Er... by rts008 (Score:2) Wednesday August 23 2006, @05:54PM
      • Re:Er... by Andy Dodd (Score:2) Wednesday August 23 2006, @10:01PM
      • Re:Er... by DrSkwid (Score:2) Thursday August 24 2006, @12:48AM
    • Pyramid Scheme (Score:5, Informative)

      by Martin Spamer (244245) on Wednesday August 23 2006, @05:58PM (#15966243) Homepage Journal
      The 'Eve Interstellar Bank' was essentially a pyramid scheme masquerading as an in-game Investment Bank. It payed a dividend that steadily rose from around 9% a month to 16% to build confidence then when the investments stopped coming in closed shop.
      [ Parent ]
      • Re:Pyramid Scheme by Shardis (Score:2) Wednesday August 23 2006, @06:41PM
        • Re:Pyramid Scheme (Score:4, Insightful)

          by Peter Cooper (660482) on Wednesday August 23 2006, @07:14PM (#15966626) Journal
          There's nothing really in real life that inherently 'supports banking'. Putting your money in the bank is, for all intents and purposes, like handing over unsecured amounts of money. Of course, laws and institutions have built up around this to provide a more secure framework, but at the end of the day.. you're putting something at risk.
          [ Parent ]
      • Re:Pyramid Scheme by rachit (Score:1) Wednesday August 23 2006, @08:09PM
    • The guy who ran the scam's video can be found here by Anonymous Coward (Score:2) Wednesday August 23 2006, @06:22PM
  • big $, small thrill (Score:1, Informative)

    by smartaleq (905491) on Wednesday August 23 2006, @05:45PM (#15966184)
    It may be the biggest scam in Eve so far, but it has far less flair that some of the others. Plus, the perptrator was a prick :-(
    • Re:big $, small thrill by dan828 (Score:1) Wednesday August 23 2006, @05:56PM
    • Re:big $, small thrill by A beautiful mind (Score:2) Wednesday August 23 2006, @05:55PM
    • Re:big $, small thrill by aafiske (Score:3) Wednesday August 23 2006, @06:32PM
      • Meh by StarKruzr (Score:3) Wednesday August 23 2006, @06:56PM
        • Re:Meh (Score:4, Insightful)

          by jandrese (485) <kensama@vt.edu> on Thursday August 24 2006, @06:35AM (#15968634) Homepage Journal
          The thing that worries me is games that are set up such that whoever invests the most time in it is the most powerful (Ok, this isn't too bad in itself, and is sort of natural, but it guarentees that the crazy people with no life are the strongest in the game), and has little to no consequences for PK.

          If you're playing the game, you're playing a fantasy. Eventually one of the stronger players will find you at just the right moment and wipe you out. Everyone who isn't the strongest is just bait. At some point the hundreds of hours you've invested in the game are going to be flushed away by one guy who just loves being an asshole, and there's nothing you can do about it.

          On the other hand, that would create a good in-game limitation against getting too addicted. Nothing breaks the addiction like being dumped back on square 1. Heck, even if you are the strongest with the biggest guild, there's always the chance that a bunch of other guilds will band together and take you down, or they'll send in spies to destroy you from the inside. A wild west atmosphere means occasionally getting shot and dying.
          [ Parent ]
          • Re:Meh by aafiske (Score:2) Thursday August 24 2006, @02:49PM
          • Re:Meh by Jaeph (Score:1) Friday August 25 2006, @02:42PM
        • "Reasonable amount of time" and MMORPG don't mix. by Behrooz (Score:2) Friday August 25 2006, @01:03AM
        • Re:Meh by WilliamSChips (Score:2) Wednesday August 23 2006, @07:32PM
        • 1 reply beneath your current threshold.
      • 1 reply beneath your current threshold.
    • Re:big $, small thrill by jjohnson (Score:2) Wednesday August 23 2006, @07:40PM
    • 1 reply beneath your current threshold.
  • Obvious (Score:2, Funny)

    by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday August 23 2006, @05:45PM (#15966187)
    What Would You Do With 700 Billion ISK?

    Trade it for a frist post, of course.
  • Apparently.... (Score:5, Insightful)

    by kinglink (195330) on Wednesday August 23 2006, @05:52PM (#15966212)
    There's like 30 forum posts I can find googling about the EIB scam. but I can't find anyone talking about what it is. Just some dude named Cally screwed a lot of people, and apparently it was legit because of voting or something?

    All I have to say is kudos for getting this story on slashdot since I don't even believe we can call it news. Let's try to at least explain the random stuff we are putting together, or at least keep the topics on stuff a little more mainstream then Eve if we don't want to spend the time actually putting an explination of the facts together.
  • The Scam (Score:4, Informative)

    by sinij (911942) on Wednesday August 23 2006, @05:54PM (#15966225) Journal
    Details can be found here [eve-online.com] and here [eve-online.com] Scammer used basic Ponzi scheme - set up a bank that gave interest on investments. Used new investments to pay off interest. Eventually, like all pyrmid schemes, it run out of investors so scammer cashed out and made "I won Eve" video. This worked since there are quite a few legitimate buisness in EVE, mostly pawnshops for T2 BPO's, that give good returns.
    • Re:The Scam by Andy Dodd (Score:2) Wednesday August 23 2006, @10:23PM
    • Re:The Scam by captn ecks (Score:1) Thursday August 24 2006, @01:52AM
  • I love it (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Kesch (943326) on Wednesday August 23 2006, @06:03PM (#15966279)
    It's interesting to watch all the scams that go on in Eve, I consider it a great social experiment.

    There are three main features of Eve that create this situation.

    1. Easy-to-use player run capitalist system. (It's easy for anyone to start up and manage a business)
    2. Zero laws against corporate fraud (As pure as capitalism gets)
    3. Anonymity from victims. (It's a lot easier to rationalize ripping off people in a virtual world.)

    Combined together these factors have lead to some amazing corporate frauds and espionage.

    I don't have time/effort myself to invest in Eve, but it's still fun to read what determined Eve players go to lengths to achieve.

    (A thought occured to me while typing this. Someone should offer some sort of contract in Eve. Either it can be done through CCP with GMs backing it and they could even charge for it, or a sufficiently large and militarized corporation could sell contract enforcement. Maybe this has already been done, otherwise feel free to steal this idea and try to make some isk with it.)
    • Re:I love it by cloricus (Score:2) Wednesday August 23 2006, @06:08PM
      • Re:I love it (Score:5, Insightful)

        by timeOday (582209) on Wednesday August 23 2006, @06:35PM (#15966450)
        If you are smart enough to scam people and you do it using the ingame restrictions (eg not using any bugs) CCP will not step in and crush you
        What's "smart" about it? Free marketeers think they hate laws, what they forget is that the market is a system of laws, without which there is no market. If there is no contract law in this game, then constructs like banks will simply be untenable, since there's no reason to think the other guy will hold up his end of the bargain. End result, no economy of interest. How is that good?
        [ Parent ]
        • Re:I love it by Taimoor (Score:3) Wednesday August 23 2006, @07:28PM
          • Re:I love it by cloricus (Score:3) Wednesday August 23 2006, @08:12PM
          • Re:I love it by timeOday (Score:3) Thursday August 24 2006, @01:06AM
          • 1 reply beneath your current threshold.
        • Re:I love it by volkris (Score:2) Wednesday August 23 2006, @08:23PM
          • Re:I love it by timeOday (Score:2) Wednesday August 23 2006, @11:02PM
            • Re:I love it by drDugan (Score:2) Thursday August 24 2006, @01:07AM
          • 1 reply beneath your current threshold.
        • Re:I love it by Shardis (Score:1) Wednesday August 23 2006, @10:59PM
          • Re:I love it by snuf23 (Score:2) Thursday August 24 2006, @12:38AM
            • Re:I love it by Shardis (Score:1) Thursday August 24 2006, @12:54AM
              • Re:I love it by kristlin (Score:1) Friday August 25 2006, @08:23AM
    • Re:I love it by CptPicard (Score:1) Wednesday August 23 2006, @06:24PM
      • Re:I love it by dootbran (Score:1) Wednesday August 23 2006, @07:07PM
        • Re:I love it by WilliamSChips (Score:1) Wednesday August 23 2006, @07:35PM
          • Re:I love it by volkris (Score:2) Wednesday August 23 2006, @08:27PM
        • Re:I love it by xero314 (Score:2) Wednesday August 23 2006, @10:59PM
          • 1 reply beneath your current threshold.
      • Re:I love it by Agripa (Score:2) Thursday August 24 2006, @04:32AM
    • Re:I love it by Shardis (Score:1) Wednesday August 23 2006, @06:56PM
      • Re:I love it by GORby_ (Score:1) Wednesday August 30 2006, @09:09AM
    • Re:I love it by MBraynard (Score:2) Wednesday August 23 2006, @10:27PM
      • Re:I love it by duffahtolla (Score:2) Thursday August 24 2006, @01:03AM
        • Re:I love it by MBraynard (Score:2) Thursday August 24 2006, @04:42PM
      • Re:I love it by Gojira Shipi-Taro (Score:1) Thursday August 24 2006, @11:15PM
    • Re:I love it by Agripa (Score:2) Thursday August 24 2006, @04:25AM
      • Re:I love it by mabu (Score:2) Thursday August 24 2006, @10:17AM
    • 3 replies beneath your current threshold.
  • Ponzi... (Score:4, Informative)

    by mythosaz (572040) on Wednesday August 23 2006, @06:17PM (#15966354)
    ...the scam was your basic Ponzi scheme.

    Get investors to your "bank" and pay them a high rate of return on their investments.
    Use your "success" to get bigger investors. Use their capital to pay out your early investors.
    Get more even bigger investors. Use their capital to pay out most of your investors.
    As soon as you think you can't widen the parymid, close up shop and keep all of the investors money.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ponzi_scheme [wikipedia.org]

  • Wow, people still play this game? (Score:1, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday August 23 2006, @06:23PM (#15966378)
    The damn thing is just a treadmill. You mine stuff, get money, mine stuff, get money, buy some mining stuff, mine stuff, get money...

    Boring as hell. Space is an empty wasteland and so is this game.
  • Perpetrator confessed to it (Score:5, Interesting)

    by aafiske (243836) on Wednesday August 23 2006, @06:25PM (#15966390)
    One of the interesting aspects is that the person who pulled the scam said so, publicly. And said who his main character is. One of the flaws in the game is that in theory, he could have transferred this money to another character he owned and been utterly untracable. But he came out and said 'I did it, these were the handful of characters I used, this is my main who I always play with'.

    More interesting, he's set a bounty on himself of 1.2 bil and gone out looking for fights. (You collect the bounty if you blow up his ship, then catch his pod and blow that up too. A little tricky, but not impossible.) With 700bil in the bank, he can afford pimpin' ships and the best gear, and not worry about when he loses them. He's already been found and podded once (by some members of the Mercenary Coalition, if anyone's curious), not sure if he's going to keep bountying himself. Given his attitude, I suspect he will, since he's looking for a fight and pvp experience.
  • Full details from the scammer himself (Score:5, Informative)

    by GoNINzo (32266) <GoNINzo AT yahoo DOT com> on Wednesday August 23 2006, @06:25PM (#15966391) Homepage Journal
    If you want the scammer's side to it, there's a video [eve-files.com], and easier to understand, text translation [eve-files.com] of the video. (or just search for EIB on http://www.eve-files.com/ [eve-files.com] )

    But it's basically 'yay i win eve'.

  • Lesson learned? (Score:2, Informative)

    by SupremoMan (912191) on Wednesday August 23 2006, @07:46PM (#15966753)
    To fall for a Pyramid scheme one must be really naive. You can make simular scheme in any game you want, just need a gullible populous.

    But then again most of tech stocks before the bubble burst were essencially Pyramid schemes. The only way to make money off of them was to sell before the bubble burst and leave someone else holding the bag.

  • WTF? (Score:1)

    by cheese-cube (910830) <cheese.cube@gmail.com> on Wednesday August 23 2006, @07:52PM (#15966780)
    For a non EVE player, the What Would You Do With 700 Billion ISK? [eve-online.com] thread makes absolutely no sense. What is a GTC or a BPO? I guess the same goes with WoW lingo.
    • Re:WTF? by Harik (Score:2) Wednesday August 23 2006, @08:31PM
      • Re:WTF? (Score:5, Informative)

        by Andy Dodd (701) <atd7&cornell,edu> on Wednesday August 23 2006, @10:44PM (#15967415) Homepage
        "BPO is a monopoly on an in-game item. (Well, there's 12-20 BluePrint Originals for each rare item). You normally win them in the in-game lottery, and it's the gift that keeps on giving. For WoW players, it'd be like purples not dropping and only being available from 1 player crafter per shard."

        Not quite. To clarify to others: BPO means "Blueprint Original". To produce any item in EVE, you need a blueprint and raw materials. Originals may be used for production, may be researched to reduce material costs and production time to a certain degree (the limit being the maximum reprocessing value of that item. i.e. if a maxed out refiner reprocesses an item that was produced with no material wastage due to good research and producer skills, no materials are lost.) Last, BPOs can be copied.

        Note that copies cannot be researched, cannot be copied again, and are limited to a certain number of production runs before they go poof. At one point copies could be used for unlimited production, and this killed the economy for at least a year and a half. While CCP made all new copies limited-run within a matter of a few months, the unlims were left ingame for at least another year before they were all converted to maximum-run-count copies.

        In the game, there are currently three main classes of items:
        Tech 1 - The baseline. The Tech 1 (referred to usually as T1) variant of any item is typically the worst variant (except for some items which have "Civilian or Basic" variants) T1 BPOs are one of the few things that can be bought off of the NPC market. There is an effectively infinite supply, so any player with enough money to invest in a T1 BPO can start producing it. For a while there was almost no money to be made in T1 unless you were first on the market (see the above comment about unlimited copies, from here on referred to as BPCs) Now that all BPCs are limited-run, there is now money to be made from T1 items, although not huge amounts.

        Named items - All better than T1 variants, with increased effectiveness and reduced fitting requirements. They are NPC drops only, and no BPOs exist. Occasionally BPCs for these may be given out in various manners.

        Tech 2 (T2) - T2 items have improved effectiveness at the cost of increased fitting requirements. (The exception being ships - they are just plain Better, and also are designed for specialization.) Some named items are better than T2 variants, although this is rare. T2 items can only be produced from BPOs that are essentially given out in a lottery, where lottery "tickets" are purchased by running missions for special NPCs in the game to gain what are called research points. There are only approximately 20 BPOs for any given T2 item in existence in the game. Additional BPOs are only given out if a BPO owner gets banned or CCP finds that they have gone inactive or have left the game. (i.e. the BPO isn't being used.) Due to the limited supply, T2 BPOs mean massive profits even though the material costs can be quite high. The thread linked to is talking about potentially buying out all (or most) BPOs of a given item, establishing a full monopoly on that item. You may see references in the thread to HACs - That stands for Heavy Assault Cruiser, and that particular type of ship is increasing in popularity but supply is not changing, so HACs are climbing steadily in price (and profit for the BPO owners).
        [ Parent ]
    • Re:WTF? by tallman68 (Score:1) Monday August 28 2006, @09:07AM
    • Re:WTF? by cheese-cube (Score:1) Wednesday August 23 2006, @08:21PM
      • Re:WTF? by cowscows (Score:2) Thursday August 24 2006, @07:00AM
    • 1 reply beneath your current threshold.
  • obOfficeSpace (Score:5, Funny)

    by Rectum2003 (686009) on Wednesday August 23 2006, @07:53PM (#15966783)
    What Would You Do With 700 Billion ISK? Two chicks at the same time. Darn straight. Two chicks at the same time.
    • Re:obOfficeSpace by HiVizDiver (Score:1) Wednesday August 23 2006, @09:00PM
      • Re:obOfficeSpace (Score:4, Funny)

        by NsOmNiA91130 (942812) on Wednesday August 23 2006, @09:52PM (#15967250)
        From the thread: "At $12-$15 per 30 day time code, 120 mil isk. Gotta go ask a friend how much prostitutes go for here in Holland. Okay, you can get 2 girls till your done for $150 bucks. So you need 10 GTC's to hook up with two girls at once, that's 1.2 billion isk. With 700 billion isk you could hook up with 1166 girls. If I did my math right"
        [ Parent ]
        • Re:obOfficeSpace by AcidLacedPenguiN (Score:2) Thursday August 24 2006, @06:34AM
    • Re:obOfficeSpace by queenb**ch (Score:2) Wednesday August 23 2006, @10:10PM
      • 1 reply beneath your current threshold.
  • Not on YouTube (Score:3, Funny)

    by 4D6963 (933028) on Wednesday August 23 2006, @10:37PM (#15967389) Homepage Journal
    Not on YouTube yet? Unless my searching skills are to blame, it's a bit surprising. I was about to upload it myself but I don't really care about that whole story...
  • by Animats (122034) on Wednesday August 23 2006, @10:39PM (#15967402) Homepage

    This could be construed as "income from a barter exchange" by the IRS. EvE should send him a 1099-B form at the end of the year, showing that as income. In the words of the IRS:

    The Internet has provided a medium for new growth in the bartering exchange industry. This growth prompts the following reminder: Barter exchanges are required to file Form 1099-B for all transactions unless certain exceptions are met. Refer to Barter Exchanges for additional information on this subject. IRS tax topic "Bartering income [irs.gov]

    This is a very real issue, because there are active markets for converting ISK to dollars and back. [gameusd.com] There are buyers, sellers, quotes, and services that track price trends. That's not an "informal exchange of services on a noncommercial basis", which the IRS doesn't tax. That's a non-dollar credit, which the IRS converts to US dollars at prevailing rates and does tax. The numbers here are big enough to attract IRS interest.

  • by RexRhino (769423) on Wednesday August 23 2006, @10:56PM (#15967448)
    I am not an eve player, but from what I read, this does not appear to be a technical exploit, or a violation of the terms of service, or anything like that.

    This was basicly an in-game version of a pyramid scheme or ponzi scheme. You can read about pyramid schemes here http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pyramid_scheme [wikipedia.org] ... but basicly "A pyramid scheme is a non-sustainable business model that involves the exchange of money primarily for enrolling other people into the scheme, usually without any product or service being delivered." This is basicly the same scam as Amway and other multi-level marketing scams (and the same model most government social insurance programs are based on).

    Apparently the scam was run IN-GAME... meaning that this wasn't a real life scam that will get someone thrown in prison in real life - Financial scamming appears to be legal gameplay in Eve, the same way it is not a crime to attack other players in the game.
  • by aldheorte (162967) on Wednesday August 23 2006, @11:29PM (#15967549)
    This occurs regularly in Eve, this just happens to be the latest incarnation (the title of "rocks" is way overblown, 99.9% of players in Eve won't even know or care). The basic "problem" in Eve is that there are no enforced laws on corporate behavior. No SEC or FTC. Therefore, it's almost a certainty that any venture that requires joint ownership and capital will ultimately end up in fraud. It's a great study for both libertarian and regulatory economists alike. Although some people may relish the prospect of no government regulation, the problem is that no grand projects of joint capital are possible (they do happen, but they are always under a cloud of suspicion and will ultimately fall to greed in most cases). This means there are no truly reliable avenues of investment (there is also no FDIC for joint ventures). For those who are going to point out that you can buy shares in X venture currently in game, wait awhile.

    Also, imagine the work it takes for one person to run a scheme of this size, dealing constantly with investments, withdrawals, and dividends. Sure, it racks up a lot of cash, but the perpetrator probably had to "play" 23/7 for six months to pull it off, constantly dealing with minutiae. So, yes, well done in terms of a scam, but it takes a hell of a lot of work. Is 700 billion units of virtual cash worth it? Maybe, when you consider how much it could be transferred into real currency if he bought time cards with ISK and sold them.

    However, here another economic curiosity comes into play - the number of people selling time cards is a limited number (you cannot buy time cards from CCP with ISK, someone has to pay CCP real money and then put them up for sale in ISK). Cashing out would spike the sell price of time cards in *ISK* through the roof. He would have to deal both the minutiae of buying and with selling hundreds if not thousands of time cards, which would also drive the cost of time cards down *in real currency*.

    Basically, when you figure it all out and divide the final take in real currency by time spent to do the scam and then transfer it all, I doubt the hourly pay is impressive. So, sorry folks, no get rich quick scheme here.
  • ISK is not so low (Score:2)

    by dolmen.fr (583400) on Thursday August 24 2006, @03:33AM (#15968237) Homepage
    Yahoo says 100M ISK is more than 1,420,000 USD [yahoo.com]. But that may be an other ISK... ;)
    • 1 reply beneath your current threshold.
  • Assassinate Dentara Rast! (Score:1, Informative)

    by Anonymous Coward on Thursday August 24 2006, @06:21AM (#15968600)
    Hah... anyone else notice the reference to Frontier: Eite?
    See; http://www.jades.org/missions.htm [jades.org]
  • Dentara Rast (Score:2)

    by Alioth (221270) <dyls@alioth.net> on Thursday August 24 2006, @07:02AM (#15968709) Homepage Journal
    Interesting. Dentara Rast is the name of a famous assassination target in Frontier: First Encounters.
  • I'm hard pressed (Score:1)

    by teflaime (738532) on Thursday August 24 2006, @07:53AM (#15968908)
    To understand why this is a scandal in EVE. The game environment is almost designed to encourage things like this, in my experience. Now, I grant you, I didn't play very long, but this game is about as free for all as MMORPGs come right now. This guy connived 700B ISK out of people. Well, boo hoo, but you shouldn't give ISK to someone you don't personally know won't rip you off.
  • by theghost (156240) on Thursday August 24 2006, @08:24AM (#15969053) Journal
    Boring. Repetitive. Encourages griefing. Oh yeah sign me up for a double helping of that.

    The more i hear about this game the less i want to play it.
  • by DrXym (126579) on Wednesday August 23 2006, @06:15PM (#15966339)
    I've spent a bit of time trying to figure out exactly what the scam was (since the original post didn't tell us) and it seems that this guy, Dentara Rast (in-game Cally) ran some sort of Eve Intergalactic Bank (EIB) which presumably did all the things a bank normally does. Deposits, withdrawls, interest, loans, etc.

    EVE Online has an incredible economy that would be very good training for real world brokerage. Therefore it doesn't surprise me that the same scams as occur in real life could occur in EVE. I guess a lot of the scams that people pull off in real life from pyramid schemes, MLMs, ponzis, insider trading etc. could all have their counterparts on EVE. The moral of this tale, is don't be dumb enough to fall for them in the first place. Anything that looks too good to be true, is too good to be true.

    [ Parent ]
  • Re:What was the scam? (Score:5, Informative)

    by Snowmit (704081) on Wednesday August 23 2006, @07:24PM (#15966661) Homepage
    I play eve.

    Phase 1: Cally opens up EIB and does an IPO on it. Many people get excited, lots of people invest, lots more people begin to store saving there.
    Phase 2: Cally builds reputation and Bank starts to seem like one of the cornerstones of Eve's burgeoning investment market. To this day it's not clear how much of that was legitimate and how much was pyramid goodness.
    Phase 3: A character named Currin Trading runs a scam and makes off with 30 billion ISK (the largest scam ever at the time)
    Phase 4: Word gets out that Currin Trading was a scam, Currin Trading posts a very long explanation of the whole scam and ends it with another shocking revelation: EIB is also a scam! He recognizes all the signs because it's so much like his own scam.
    Phase 5: Forum drama.
    Phase 6: Insane forum drama.
    Phase 7: Cally's faked a) hospitalization, b) incarceration c) death in very short sequence.
    Phase 8: EIB is revelaed to be a scam, Dentara Rast is revelaed to be Cally's main (players can have up to three character per account) much gloating occurs. He puts a billion ISK bounty on his own head and goes out to fly PVP with the most expensive ships and equipment he can find (in Eve, if your ship blows up you lose it entirely).
    Phase 9: Slashdot!

    It should be noted that scams are an accepted part of the Eve game mechanics. Eve is ruthelessly PvP in combat and in the marketplace. It seems as though this was an entirely legitimate (in an EULA sense of the word) scam and that Dentara Rast will get off free and clear.
    [ Parent ]
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