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12/27/11 4:20:14 AM#61
With online retail companies like amazon, you have the option to erase your payment details. However, this still doesn't tell me if everyone involved in payment processes still keep your data in their databases anyway or even who all is involved in these processes. I wish the payment process online were more transparant for the customers. For example, over a year ago, I was playing DAoC and was one of those who got multiple charges for one month's worth of subscription (thank goodness in my case it was only 7 times, some people were charged over 30 times). The error was not on Mythic's part, but on the part of the company who handled the actual billing and payment, and whose name I forget at the moment. I didn't even realize that there was a different company involved that did all of the billing until the screw-up happened. There was no information on the Mythic website about it anywhere. Two companies have your cc information here: Mythic and the company who handles the billing. If I delete my cc info on Mythic's website, do they in fact actually keep it anyway? Does the billing company erase my cc info from its database? Once I have stopped playing and cancelled my subscription, shouldn't my cc info be automatically erased from both companies' websites to protect me?
My answer to my own rhetorical questions is that we, the consumer, should have more control over where our vital cc info goes and online companies should be better at protecting our information. At the moment we have no control over it. Who knows if our information isn't given over anyway to interested third parties by these companies? Though most terms and conditions say that our privacy is protected, this is done on a trust-based level. If they did something with our info, we probably wouldn't know about it, even if it were, say, to be given to some company linked to them for advertizement purposes. That may seem unimportant and not quite that much of a big deal. It is also still the principle of it and amounts to an invasion of privacy imo. As someone who has tried out a large number of games and subbed to quite a few of them, I feel very vulnerable right now. The thing is, even if you tried out something in 2005 or whatever, your info is still there, ripe for the picking it seems. Companies online should be like companies offline with the data protection act and get rid of addresses, old billing info, etc. after a certain (short) period of time. What is good for paper is even better for the internet... Playing MUDs and MMOs since 1994. |
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12/27/11 4:24:19 AM#62
Originally posted by tkoreaper Read the op next time before breaking out into a rant. |
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12/27/11 4:25:28 AM#63
Ugh, I posted my long-winded reply while you posted this. Is there anyway to take old databases offline and do an info dump in a quaranteened environment? I am not a computer IT person, so don't know if it is possible, but do these things always have to be done online? Playing MUDs and MMOs since 1994. |
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12/27/11 4:28:57 AM#64
Originally posted by tkoreaper How is it my fault that some one has ripped off Trion's user database? Some people are truly mind boggling. I wont say mind boggling what as I don't want to get an infraction. |
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12/27/11 4:35:14 AM#65
No, hackers are unstoppable, it's the build a better mousetrap. Hackers, at least "real" ones do what they can to break through and leave a note or something to say "YO! We got in here are some of the holes, FIX and we'll be back again to break through another unprotected area". It's not a matter of how secure or how good your personal web-security people are, if a hacker wants in and they are good enough they will get in. The ONLY way anything is secure on a computer is one that has NO connection to a outside line/another computer/internet/wifi/remote access of any kind. Then it's a breaking and entering thing in order to get physical access to the computer. It's gonna happen, I'm sure blizzard has had it happen whether or not it was leaked to media or even alerted to their subscriber base is unknown(I just don't know/remember if anything ever hit the media). What your looking at is another in a long string of problems that will plague the internet gaming community. |
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12/27/11 4:39:51 AM#66
Really? Then EXPLAIN TO ME why someone who is a IT Security Specialist who has a special set of programs that tell him when ANYTHING from a cookie to a packet of information to a installation of a program hits his harddrive(whether it be a keylogger or winamp). This guy uses completely random numbers and letters for passwords and every site he uses a different username and password which he only keeps on a paper pad he stores in his locked desk. Now he got his WoW account hacked not just once but twice. So to say it was HIS fault is like saying that our current president is responsible for every action that every president that came before him did or any legislation that was put into place. |
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12/27/11 4:42:47 AM#67
Originally posted by Complication deathsentence but then again hackers are mostly hired by other companies in same business to do harm ;) |
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12/27/11 4:45:07 AM#68
Originally posted by JayBirdz It was a repsonse to the people claiming the game has poor security and have been hacked before. |
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12/27/11 4:48:43 AM#69
Originally posted by Gorilla First off, they didn't get enough information to do anything with right away... maybe with time they could have but you're well aware of the situation now... right? So yes, if you get hacked after this... it is your fault. What I said was directed more towards those that said they were hacked in the past. |
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Phaserlight
Advanced Member
Joined: 7/18/04
The simple is the seal of the true. And beauty is the splendor of truth. -S. Chandrasekhar |
12/28/11 3:16:36 PM#70
I just got finished updating my password, reconfirming, etc., after getting the email, even though I haven't touched Rift since beta. This is going to make me think twice before signing up for even another beta test. "To be what you are not, experience what you are not." -Saint John of the Cross |
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JoeyMMO
Apprentice Member
Joined: 10/09/11
To busy playing GW2 to post much around here... *shrug* |
12/28/11 4:22:37 PM#71
It's a hassle, especially if you used that password elsewhere too. Even when encrypted, they could have known passwords already set up to be able to decrypt fast. In short password compromised, personal information out there. Whew, not good. I hope I got instances of that password... I'm glad they reported the break-in though, so good points there. |