Labyrinthine 'EVE Online' Scam Recounted 51
Thanks to Terra Nova for its post discussing "a lengthy, but intensely fascinating and well-written account of an EVE Online [PC MMO] player who brokered a large investment scam by creating a puppet corporation." Terra Nova mentions that the account's nefarious author "does an incredible job of explaining the complexity of MMORPG worlds, the emotional salience of interactions, and how play transforms into work", concluding: "It's a lot of reading, but it's well worth it."
Freecache link... (Score:2, Informative)
The best part... (Score:5, Informative)
Re:The best part... (Score:4, Insightful)
Laws do not apply ex post facto. You can't change a speed limit from 60mph to 30mph and then mail tickets to everybody who drove on the road while it was 60mph, and you can't prosecute this guy for virtual currency fraud when there was no law against it (and still isn't). The victims are welcome to sue in civil court, assuming they even know anything more about the guy than his online avatar name and a library phone number, but it'd be a rare judge that would take them seriously.
What he did wasn't right, but at the time it also wasn't wrong (still isn't). Besides, this is fake money. Fake. As in, not real.
Re:The best part... (Score:2)
I will admit you're right, both on the ex post facto part and the unlikeliness a judge would care.
Re:The best part... (Score:2)
it could disappear overnight and you wouldn't get squat, if the publisher would decide so.
I'm pretty sure the mmo's have clauses in the playing contracts that state that everything stays the property of the publishing com
Re:The best part... (Score:2)
The biggest difference is as you mentioned, for legal reasons, the publishing company owns all rights to the in game "property," therefore individual
Re:The best part... (Score:4, Insightful)
As to the law applying, its a matter of PRECEDENT. I didnt say they would pass a new law. They dont have to. As soon as a judge rules that scamming virtual currency is against EXISTING fraud laws then what this guy did becomes illegal, in a somewhat retroactive fashion. Precedent doesnt have to pre-date the crime, it only has to pre-date the day its applied again in court. This is why you sometimes hear of a court postponing a decision until a [higher profile / more important] case in a [higher] court is decided which will affect the outcome.
Re:The best part... (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:The best part... (Score:2)
What's different about a country "folding", as opposed to a "company"?
Re:The best part... (Score:2)
And more.. I don't know about EVE, since I can't seem to sign up right now (has their card auth server been slashdotted or something? Not many posts here), but in Star Wars Galaxies, even though you can find tons of SWG stuff on Ebay for real money, it's actually forbidden in the user agreement and grounds for account termination. I think that's a great thing really, and a good move on their part. Whether or not their policy is effective at preventing such
Re:The best part... (Score:2)
You are not selling the virtual currency, you are selling the action of transferring it. You can't sell something that doesn't belong to you, and aside from the question of whether you can buy something which is virtual (clearly you can, since you can order software and downlo
Re:The best part... (Score:2)
Re:The best part... (Score:2)
Re:The best part... (Score:2, Insightful)
If you've ever played Eve, you'll know (or you should know) that this is what the game is all about. It's about lying, cheating and stealing. All the other activities of the game are there only to give context to the end game - PvP. Every ship, missle, player corp - whatever - represents hours and hour
Re:The best part... (Score:2)
Re:The best part... (Score:2)
For full effect... (Score:5, Interesting)
As for the story itself... it's another tale of people pushing the rules as far as they'll go to get ahead. There's a natural tendency to want to take any advantage, whether it be by exploiting others, exploiting loopholes, exploiting lax enforcement of the rules, or just grinding incessantly. And since the worst that can happen to you online is that you get IP banned or key banned (which only diminishes your standing in that virtual world), it opens up all sorts of doors for people to fulfill whatever escapist criminal fantasies they have. Is that good or bad? Well... that's almost the same debate as "games cause violence".
The really interesting part is the epilogue: after scamming what would amount to a sizeable amount of cash on EBay, he doesn't buy anything with it or flaunt it, he just gives it away. Guess there's really nothing to do once you're the richest player on the server.
Re:For full effect... (Score:5, Interesting)
It was more than that. From his story, Nightfreeze was doing a brisk, legal trade business, with a bit of pirate hunting vengeance on the side, until the developers caved into pirate requests to nerf the one real defense a trader had -- the MWD (micro warp drive). In doing so, it made the game nearly impossible for traders, so Nightfreeze decided that if the developers were going to screw around, why shouldn't he? In the end, he realized that he screwed himself in the process, getting all of that money but losing the time invested in his scamming character, so that his new character wouldn't be able to utilize that bankroll for months.
Disclaimer: I've never played EVE Online, and I'm only going by what was available in the story. It was a good story, though.
Re:For full effect... (Score:2)
As for the trader losing his only defense to pirates... (The MWD) Well, the whining about who has the unfair advantage never stops on either side. Keep in mind that the story here took place early after release, and the
Re:For full effect... (Score:2)
that was intense. (Score:3, Interesting)
After that disturbing recount you realize he is crazy enough to go through with it. The drama is intense as he earns his victims trust. You feel guilty for suspicous ones who require alot of coaxing, you smile and nod at the one jerk, the guy who has it comming to him.
When its all done I couln't belive it, I could never have done what he did. I wont sleep tonight thinking about poor HardHead. He lost his money but breaking his trust was the worst of all. Think about it, if Trazir gave him his money back, or gave him the full profits, Hardhead will still never be the same. Yes that irk was indeed cursed.
Re:that was intense. (Score:3, Interesting)
My po
Re:that was intense. (Score:3, Interesting)
Yeah, I felt sorry for Hardhead. Defrauding Thoggins I could feel good about, but Hardhead seemed to be a nice guy.
But the one I really want to know about is Frosttt.
Re:that was intense. (Score:1)
I could just feel the thrill. The original presentation 18 hours apart would have been stellar to read.
Re:that was intense. (Score:3, Informative)
Poor guy, happy as heck noob with 300M, suddenly getting death threats and confused as hell why
Hmm (Score:1)
It's a RolePlaying Game (Score:5, Insightful)
Shooting one another is fine, but lying isn't?
Role-playing a crook (Score:4, Insightful)
He first got people to make little "pilot" investments of 1 million isk, and paid them back on time. Meanwhile he was collecting new investments.
Doesn't take long to see where this is going, does it? But for some reason, skeptics were in the minority. Despite warnings of a Ponzi scheme, more than half the people in my corporation started giving this guy money, to a total of about 1/2 billion isk. They never got a dime.
I wouldn't be suprised to find that all those who did get paid were shills. The guy kept posting apologies and excuses on the various player forums, and managed to keep convincing people to give him money, and keep his original investors believing they would get paid.
I guess people thought that because it was a game, that no one would rip them off. But think about it, it's a game designed with PIRACY as one of the coolest ways to make money.
But people didn't or couldn't see that the whole entire operation took place completely within the game mechanics and environment. No cheats or exploits were used. If anything "illegal" happened, then it's only within the game world, which is designed to encourage "illegal" behavior anyway.
I'm sure Morbo had a great time. I imagined someone doing this in preparation for a term paper on Charles Ponzi or the gullibility of the average investor, etc. My hat's off to him, wherever he is.
Re:(OT) EVE Online sounds awesome! (Score:1)
I mainly quit because after the beta wipe, the org dissolved as most of the people just left. I might get back into it, but the secret is to find an org that is friendly and helpful.
Nope (Score:4, Informative)
If you stop to think, it has to be this way. Otherwise the devs would be buried under an avalanche of lawsuits.
Re:He's lucky he didn't get caught (Score:2)
The telephone fraud part is interesting though. But because its not legitimate goods it sounds equivilent to telling you girlfriend your not cheating on her. Or even more accurate say that you are a skinny hunk to lure someone out on a date with you when you are really a fat slob.
Re:He's lucky he didn't get caught (Score:1)
Re:He's lucky he didn't get caught (Score:4, Interesting)
Since the entire deal was in virutal currency (owned by eve online) it is governed by their EULA (see relavent portion below). No property or money was defrauded since ownership remained entirely in control of the software maker.
B. Rights to Certain Content
You have no interest in the value of your time spent playing the Game, for example, by the building up of the experience level of your character and the items your character accumulates during your time playing the Game. Your Account, and all attributes of your Account, including all corporations, actions, groups, titles and characters, and all objects, currency and items acquired, developed or delivered by or to characters as a result of play through your Accounts, are the sole and exclusive property of CCP, including any and all copyrights and intellectual property rights in or to any and all of the same, all of which are hereby expressly reserved.
Re:That's for a court to decide, not you (Score:2)
The scammer could conceivably be brought to justice according to the law. EULAs aren't the law.
A clickthrough or shrinkwrap EULA for software is legally very weak, and can probably be defeated in court by the right high-priced lawyer. But the EULA for an online service is very different. If you have an ongoing monthly payment, then the license is far stronger.
But in this case, it doesn't matter. No real property was ever exchanged... not just because the EULA said it's not real, but because i
2. ??? (Score:3, Funny)
Very well writen (Score:2, Insightful)
I feel sorry for HardHead, if I had been Nightfreeze I would have given him all the isk's rather than give them to any old n00b, but then again I probably could not have gone through with it either.
Ultimatly Nightfreeze encountered the biggest problem with RPG's, once you beat the system there is nothing left for you. You feel like a hollow shell, don't want to play it any more cause its pointless, you beat it
Why do people have a problem with this? (Score:2, Interesting)
Childish (Score:3, Interesting)
[..] there lies a poorly designed game which rewards the greedy and violent, and punishes the hardworking and honest; and if you think about it, that's a good representation of capitalism.
Yeah, because it sucks so much to live as a hardworking and honest person in the US, UK, or Japan, compared to how amazing it is in China or was in Soviet Russia.