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Azeroth Security Advisor: WoW is watching you, part 1

Every week, computer expert Jon Eldridge is your Azeroth Advisor. He will delve into the darkest reaches of computer rumor and bring the facts back home even if they’re wriggling the end of a pike. His goal is to provide useful information to gamers who don’t think about much and flame fodder for those self appointed experts who need to rationalize the cost of their expensive certifications. Like any good force he’s a mercenary heart and is happy to take subject requests from the user community that he serves. So feel to leave a comment below or just sit back and enjoy the show.

If you play WoW you agreed to the Terms of Use Agreement and End User License Agreement even if you don’t know . If you’re like most gamers you “agreed” with all the forethought and consideration of a lab rat agreeing to run a maze in for a yummy pellet of rat chow. Scurry, scurry, click, click… yum! Let’s face , when you’re just two clicks away from playing the hottest MMORPG on the planet those screens usually go by just as fast as they appear. But what else besides deep fat fried MMO goodness is contained within the WoW client you’re running?

One of things you agreed to while merrily clearing those pesky EULA and Terms of Use screens after every patch is that MAY” monitor your PC’s RAM and CPU processes for “unauthorized” 3rd party programs that by ’s “sole determination” may or may not be deemed naughty. Naughty in this includes but is not limited to teleporting, data , exploiting , facilitating bots and generally doing an end run around the game mechanics for and profit. In reality the WoW.exe DOES monitor your system, silently, thoroughly, and every 15 seconds.

Some of you know about the hype and controversy that occurred in 2005 around the claim that had bundled spyware within the WoW client. I didn’t until a few days ago when I decided to investigate the rumor. After digesting hundreds of /flame posts, up on ’s legal activity and even managing to uncover a fact or two I’m here to uphold the three pillars of journalism, stimulate, educate, and aggravate.

keeps track of the and software running on your PC in three ways that I could find. The first is a periodic system survey. You may occasionally notice a spooky little message like “Sending non-identifiable personal information” during the handshake process while logging in. assures the user community that this is a survey that helps their development team optimize and “future ”. The survey logs information about your CPU, RAM, OS, , , HD/CD/DVD and internet connection.

Some users consider this invasive and others wish they had been better informed as the message itself is less than confidence inspiring. Should you be concerned about the system survey? For most players including myself I would have to say no. has done a fantastic job getting WoW to run on older systems and if this is the mechanism they use to ensure that fact more power to them. sure beats manual surveys. I would love to see publish the results of this million plus system survey broken down by each category. Who wouldn’t want to know how their rig measures up to the competition like Valve does and use that data to rationalize more upgrades?

The second item employs to safeguard your experience by sniffing around on your system is the Launcher.exe program. The Launcher is the default start mechanism for WoW. According to the Launcher distributes news, protects against viruses, and upholds the Terms of Use by scanning for cheat programs in use prior to logging in.

Overall the Launcher is a benefit to the user community. For folks who do not frequent the WoW website the news supplied via the Launcher can provide critical information about game play, , and easy access to technical support. The courtesy virus scan is certainly a bonus. But potentially far more valuable than anything else provides is the pre login cheating scan that attempts to prevent an unnecessary ban of your account. If the Launcher decides that you are running a cheat program will notify you and give you a chance to disable the program prior to logging into the game. Once logged in any cheat software detected on your computer puts you of getting suspended or banned from the game permanently.

recognizes that not everybody has full control over the computer they play on or is fully aware of all the programs running on their computer so they built in a safeguard. “We’ve often found that players whose account information had been compromised by a Trojan program or whose WoW accounts were banned for using a third-party cheat program while playing were unaware that these programs existed on the computer they used to play the game.” has banned thousands of players from WoW for various reasons since launch. Any attempt to minimize the collateral damage caused by the constant cat and mouse game going on behind the scenes should be applauded. Use of the launcher is not compulsory though and you can access the main login directly via WoW.exe located in the WoW program folder.

So far so good but didn’t get this far without a (m)ace up their sleeve. Tune in next week for all the trauma and drama caused by the discovery of ’s ultimate boss mob… the Warden. Cue thunderclap and scary .

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