Tuesday, August 10, 2010

Part 6: RTW Success, but sad news for SC2





Today I'd like to hit on a small success story for the Death2Botters blog. RTW, while not approving of the blog, did take the cheating sites' memberlists I sent them and compare the lists to game subscribers. Here's information from one banned user who tried to get his account back, but had the door slammed in his face by RTW.


While only one user posted about this experience with RTW comparing the membership lists of cheat sites, I will assume that others were banned this way too. I would like to thank some of the people who helped me scrub through the lists from different sites for forum usernames and in-game usernames to be highlighted in the report sent to RTW.

Sad News for Starcraft 2
The hacking community has had access to Starcraft 2 throughout their beta and have already published and begun selling their hack to customers by the time SC2 was released. While not as popular as FPS aimbots, SC2 has gotten its share of attention on 2 of the hacking sites I monitor. One site (the one I use for display purposes) has had moderate success in hacking the game and recieved a fair number of new members since the game released. It is safe to assume the majority of new members within a few weeks of a major game release are subscribing for that game. Trolls take note: I said majority, not all. Dispute all you want.



Since my first post that showed the nearly 2000 people that joined one site in the APB time frame, this particular site has blocked its members list from being searched and collected like I had previously done, so I cannot offer you numbers on SC2, but I would estimate roughly 100 new members joining for the SC2 cheat, and who knows how many previous members use the cheat without reading the forums.



I also wanted to include a shot on Aion, as the game originally had a huge 3rd party bot problem at its release. The Aion development team spent countless hours on preventing these types of hack/botting programs from entering the game, and while hugely successful (entire guilds were shut down), there still remains a botting community of decent size for the game. Note that while Aion has collected this many posts and views over the course of a year, it barely keeps up with the numbers APB had in its first month.




Finally, onto those of you who continue to say that this site merely advertises for these cheaters and cheat sites and makes the problem worse. Take close note of this: The cheaters are bothered by this site and its contents. They often make posts about the Death2Botters blog with increasing concern. The information that this blog contains as well as the information I've provided to RTW has forced the cheat sites to take security measures to attempt to protect their members by blocking member searched. It has caused them to change their hacks' injection methods and functionality, and has shown would-be hackers that those that are hacking, are getting banned (however slowly). Numbers of people subscribing to the hack sites (for APB) after the creation of this blog declined sharply. Whether or not that is because of lack of interest in APB, or partially influenced by this blog is unsure.

Until next time readers,

The San Paro Saint

Wednesday, August 4, 2010

Part 5: RTW Quits Caring

First off, for those following my blog, I'm sorry about the delay since the last post. I've been out of town on business.

I would like to announce that I have had numerous emails from people wanting to help assist me in this effort, and have accepted some who have been able to provide a great level of assistance in collecting information and cracking into some of the hacks. I want to extend a warm thank you to those involved. If you wish to assist me in any way, please email me at: i.hatecheats@yahoo.com

Recently, many hackers have received an email stating that they have been caught using a 3rd party program and are being WARNED. Insert serious WTF moment right here! WARNED? Who the hell warns a hacker? A company that realizes the MAJORITY of their player base is hacking, and if they ban all the hackers, they will lose significant revenue from the game.

If this alone does not cue you in to how many people are hacking in APB, then you have some serious issues. Now sure, there are those of you out there that will say "they are warning because they are not 100% sure". It is very possible, but the same people they are warning were using the same hacks that were initially caught and banned. They know the hack, they don't want to ban.

One thread of concern about the hack:


This email has gone out to a large majority of the hackers. Reports from multiple hack sites have shown that unpopular hacks with a small amount of subscribers have had accounts banned. The larger, more popular hacks have not had users banned. Reason: Money. They try to show the community that they are banning hackers, but don't want to lose too much revenue in the process. So banning hackers that use unpopular hacks (10~100) is much better than banning users that have the popular ones (500+).


Here is a copy of parts of a conversation that show concern over username/email similarities in hack sites and APB accounts. Reason: They have received my emails and emails from people assisting me containing lists of users and emails used to register on this site, accounts that mirror the hack sites are being flagged.




And finally, there is hope, however small. Every hack site that we have checked has had banned users:



For those who have questions about why I only post articles from one hacking forum, is that some of the other forums I have access to readily display my account information and identify me more easily than others. Also, I wish to retain access to all sites while only risking loss of access to one.

On a final note, my forums account has been banned by Toxico. An email was sent to me stating that RTW's community managers have banned my forum account because I continued to portray RTW in a negative way and was causing damage to their game's image and thus constricting their advertisement and accrual of new players. Apparently RTW is very sensitive about their hacking problem and continue to try to hide it to the best of their ability. As a result, I ask that you followers who agree with my blog continue to advertise it in the RTW forums by putting it in your signature so that others may learn more about this ongoing problem and gaming companies' around the world who can't compete with hacks.