SnapSlav
NMA's local DotA fanatic
So, I'm (right NOW) a pretty prolific Steam Item Trader, though my productivity has both waxed and waned. Before that I enjoyed in-game marketplaces in various MMOs. I traded in Diablo II and even contemplated being an item farmer, trading items for cash, until I realized there was no way I could compete with botters. I've played many different games, and I've watched each game fall under attack from scammers. People acting on their own, or entire waves of programming that targets untold numbers of players. I usually can make sense out of it: Trick user into giving up log-in info, steal user's account, take digital valuables, liquidate, abandon stolen account, repeat en mass. I've personally fallen victim to an appallingly simplistic scam, myself, in my Diablo II days, though I picked myself back up, made a new account, and recovered. I've had an account hacked and pillaged. I've fallen for TWO different steam trading scams. Each time I fall for a scam, I learn and move on.
But unlike those other games, Steam is an entire gaming platform. Like that month-long PlayStation Network blackout back in 2011, when an entire platform is targeted, the repercussions have the potential to be pretty severe. When you're scammed in Diablo II, you lose your D2 account, with the possibility of compromising your other Bnet accounts, but you don't necessarily lose them. If you get your STEAM account taken, there goes your entire Steam Library, and all that time and money you've invested in it!
I'd grown wise to the scams in my years of Steam Item Trading, so when I started seeing phishing scams, I knew better than to click them. I'd read enough about them (without clicking them, myself) to know that they'd send me to a copycat page masquerading as a Steam log-in, prompting me to sign in, where they'd steal my information and take my account from me. Well, it's more complicated than that, but the phishing spamming was so prolific, I realized that countless thousands of unwitting, newbie traders had fallen victim to these scams and had their Steam accounts stolen from them. I felt bad for them, because they'd just gotten started. They didn't have the experience of being fucked over by lower-level scams like I had to know better than to fall for these more dangerous scams. Sure, you want to say "Well if you fall for it, your fault!" But they were just getting started! They didn't know better. =(
But yesterday I encountered something new...
A Steam Friend sent me a message I immediately recognized to be suspicious (I won't post it, including the link, for obvious reasons) that went along the lines of, "Hi let's trade this: suspiciousimageurl" It made me think, "Damn, this friend got phished and his account was stolen. That sucks. =(" so I took the time to post a warning on his profile to all his friends that he'd been phished and to not click that link, and also potentially to him if he should track down his stolen account and see my message, that I'd still be here, should be ever get his account back. But..... his account was never stolen! He messaged me and realized something had happened, asking me for my advice. I gave him the simple suggestions: change passwords, possibly change account email, run antivirus. All the while asking him what happened, exactly.
A friend of HIS with whom he was used to sharing links with had sent him that same message, and he clicked the link. Apparently that was when his profile sent that same message to all his Steam Friends, and presumably the process would repeat itself for every friend-of-a-friend-of-a-friend-and-so-on who clicked the link, spreading the message. But the link just sent a script that would generate more of the message. It got me thinking, what's the point of this? When, after a few hours of scanning his system and checking for any cracks in his security, he felt like he was pretty safe, it seemed like nothing had been done which would actually take ANYTHING. So why was this thing being done? I couldn't make sense of it, but I knew it was SOME kind of scam. Very puzzling.
So, if anyone knows, feel free to share. Fall for any scams in recent history OR well into the past? Share that too! There's all kinds of different scams, be they those oooooooooooooooooold "enlarge your penis" spam ads at the onset of the internet's rise in the mid 90s, or the latest attempts to steal entire Steam profiles! What's your story- or your knowledge on the subject?
But unlike those other games, Steam is an entire gaming platform. Like that month-long PlayStation Network blackout back in 2011, when an entire platform is targeted, the repercussions have the potential to be pretty severe. When you're scammed in Diablo II, you lose your D2 account, with the possibility of compromising your other Bnet accounts, but you don't necessarily lose them. If you get your STEAM account taken, there goes your entire Steam Library, and all that time and money you've invested in it!
I'd grown wise to the scams in my years of Steam Item Trading, so when I started seeing phishing scams, I knew better than to click them. I'd read enough about them (without clicking them, myself) to know that they'd send me to a copycat page masquerading as a Steam log-in, prompting me to sign in, where they'd steal my information and take my account from me. Well, it's more complicated than that, but the phishing spamming was so prolific, I realized that countless thousands of unwitting, newbie traders had fallen victim to these scams and had their Steam accounts stolen from them. I felt bad for them, because they'd just gotten started. They didn't have the experience of being fucked over by lower-level scams like I had to know better than to fall for these more dangerous scams. Sure, you want to say "Well if you fall for it, your fault!" But they were just getting started! They didn't know better. =(
But yesterday I encountered something new...
A Steam Friend sent me a message I immediately recognized to be suspicious (I won't post it, including the link, for obvious reasons) that went along the lines of, "Hi let's trade this: suspiciousimageurl" It made me think, "Damn, this friend got phished and his account was stolen. That sucks. =(" so I took the time to post a warning on his profile to all his friends that he'd been phished and to not click that link, and also potentially to him if he should track down his stolen account and see my message, that I'd still be here, should be ever get his account back. But..... his account was never stolen! He messaged me and realized something had happened, asking me for my advice. I gave him the simple suggestions: change passwords, possibly change account email, run antivirus. All the while asking him what happened, exactly.
A friend of HIS with whom he was used to sharing links with had sent him that same message, and he clicked the link. Apparently that was when his profile sent that same message to all his Steam Friends, and presumably the process would repeat itself for every friend-of-a-friend-of-a-friend-and-so-on who clicked the link, spreading the message. But the link just sent a script that would generate more of the message. It got me thinking, what's the point of this? When, after a few hours of scanning his system and checking for any cracks in his security, he felt like he was pretty safe, it seemed like nothing had been done which would actually take ANYTHING. So why was this thing being done? I couldn't make sense of it, but I knew it was SOME kind of scam. Very puzzling.
So, if anyone knows, feel free to share. Fall for any scams in recent history OR well into the past? Share that too! There's all kinds of different scams, be they those oooooooooooooooooold "enlarge your penis" spam ads at the onset of the internet's rise in the mid 90s, or the latest attempts to steal entire Steam profiles! What's your story- or your knowledge on the subject?