NEWS /
|
Facing real world debts, a trusted figure in a popular online game stole money from the virtual bank he ran and exchanged it for cash through the black market. It happened in EVE Online, where more than 300,000 subscribers pay $15 a month to play. They gain wealth through hard work, manipulating the market, or killing rivals in a distant future where humans have colonized the stars in an online game similar to World of Warcraft and Second Life. EBank, EVE's largest player-run financial institution which has thousands of depositors, is at the center of the scandal. "Basically this character was one of the people that been running EBank for a while. He took a bunch of (virtual) money out of the bank, and traded it away for real money," said Ned Coker, of the Icelandic company CCP, which developed the game. The CEO of EBank, a 27-year-old Australian tech worker who identified himself only as Richard and used the online name Ricdic, embezzled about 200 billion interstellar kredits, the game's virtual currency. He broke the rules of the game by exchanging the stolen virtual funds for $6,300 Australian ($5,100) with players who preferred to buy virtual money rather than earn it playing the game. "It was a very on the spot decision," the married father of two explained in an interview. He said a spam email for a black market website that traded online money for real cash popped up on his screen, prompting him to exchange the virtual cash for real money to cover a deposit on his house and expenses related to his son's medical problems. "I saw that as an avenue that could be taken, and I decided to skim off the top, you could say, to overcome real life (difficulties)." Word of the theft spread quickly within EVE. Panicked customers started a run on the bank, worried that they would lose the money they had amassed by hunting space pirates or mining asteroids. Ironically, if Ricdic had merely stolen the online money he could have stayed in the game. But exchanging the virtual cash for real dollars broke the rules and CCP banned Richard's EBank accounts. "It unbalances the game," Coker said. Players can only buy virtual money with real money, or use virtual cash to pay for playing time, but they cannot exchange game money for the real thing. "We have never seen ourselves as gods who make the rules of social interaction," said Eyjolfur Gudmundsson, an economics adviser to CCP. "You are able to lose the things you have created. That's what makes the world interesting." Ironically, Richard had built a reputation as one of EVE's few trusted players - a rare commodity in a game where repeatedly blowing up a violator's spaceship was the only way to enforce some contracts. Asked if he had any regrets about the scam, Richard said he felt he let down his fellow EBank staffers, many of whom he considered friends. "I'm not proud of it at all, that's why I didn't brag about it. But you know, if I had to do it again, I probably would've chosen the same path based on the same situation," he said. EBank survived the crisis. But Richard will not be returning to EVE anytime soon. "At the moment, we've got our hands full," Richard said about his family responsibilities in the real world. |
Tags: Virtual world , World of Warcraft , Second Life
Kids Socialize in a Virtual World as Avatars
Company to Create Chinese Virtual World
Blizzard looking at mobile gaming?
Video Games Dragged Into Norwegian Terror Attacks
Oslo Killer Played Video Games to 'Train'
Chinese Prisoners Forced To Play World Of Warcraft
Leaked Images, Availability, Pricing,
Specs, Pre-order
Karbonn officially launches the A9 Android smartphone
14 May, 2012, 06:14 PM IST
Supreme Court website hacked in response to TPB, Vimeo block
17 May, 2012, 04:46 PM IST
Sony Xperia P up for pre-order on Infibeam, launching on 25 May
19 May, 2012, 04:32 PM IST
Samsung Galaxy S III pops up on eBay India for Rs. 44,770
22 May, 2012, 11:19 AM IST
16 May, 2012, 11:57 AM IST
The latest "should they-shouldn't they" event with Facebook is the lift of the minimu...
Five ways to beat the petrol hike
Petrol prices went up by a considerable amount post Wednesday, and this...
By Karan Shah
The Future of Broadband - views from industry leaders
One of the other events that took place at the same venue as the recent...
10 Android apps to make your life easier
Technology has been designed and redesigned to make our lives simpler. And

BBM to remain exclusive to BlackBerry
25 May, 2012, 12:40 PM IST
Over the last few years, Research in Motion has been losing ground in the smartphone market, owing to the ever increasing competition that it has been facing from the iOS and Android platform.
Sony, Samsung set minimum pricing on TVs; no more heavy discounts
Corsair launches GS500 gaming series PSU
Facebook launches Camera App for iOS

Nokia working on future PureView handsets,
Sony shutting shop on feature phone...
Google's official 7-inch tablet...
Samsung’s Galaxy Tab 2 310 shows up on...

















Mixx
Facebook
Twitter
Digg
delicious
reddit
MySpace
StumbleUpon
LinkedIn










































































_011517074205_160x90.jpg)















