Blizzard Account Administration told not to restore hacked characters
In a stunning revelation from a veteran account administrator at Blizzard, WoW.com has learned that account administrators are being told by Blizzard managers not to restore people’s characters and items after their account has been ransacked by gold sellers and keyloggers. Instead, account administrators are being told to give people a “care package” and get them to accept the package in lieu of total account restoration.
If the player does not accept this care package, they are then forced to go into a character restoration queue that is consistently several days to weeks long. According to sources familiar with the situation, this “care package policy” has been implemented in order to lighten the work load of those Blizzard employees who perform account restorations. Similar policies have existed at other times account compromises have been high, such as during the transition from Vanilla WoW to The Burning Crusade.
This care package being offered consists of the following:
- 2,500 gold
- 2 Emblems of Frost
- 10 Emblems of Triumph for every day the players has had to wait to receive the care package
If the player accepts the care package, their restoration case is considered closed and no additional items or gold will be restored on the account that were lost because of the security compromise.
WoW.com believes that this practice, while potentially making some sense logistically, stands firmly against the best interest of the players. Sources that we have spoken with tell us most account administrators do not agree with this policy, however their hands are tied due to Blizzard management (it is their job, after all, and they have to do as they’re told).
WoW.com believes Blizzard can do a better job at solving long restoration queue times without placing player’s hard work as a secondary concern. Instead of offering players a care package, Blizzard can employ more staff, and as we will discuss in a later post, train those staff in better ways to prevent account compromises and exploitation. The serious consideration given to mandatory authenticators is also part of this solution.
Thanks to Poyzon for the heads up!
Tagged with: account administration, account hacking, blizzard, hacking, warcraft, World of Warcraft, wow.com Category: Game News, World of Warcraft




Blizzard Account Administration told not to restore hacked characters | 
This has happend to my coworker recently … he lost 3 80s and blizzard told him they would give him 60 emblems of frost per 80 and 2500 gold each 80 instead of a full restore… he said screw you, give me my stuff. They told him it would take 7 to 14 days to get his stuff back.
Jesus I don’t know why it takes so long to restore. Why not just offer the guy to restore back to a 1 week ago prior state, or what if they automated a restore to the last time a prior IP address accessed the account?
Sucks when these kind of things happen to people.
If you have an authenticator, its pretty much impossible for them to get into your account.
Happened to a friend of mine, took about 2 weeks to get his stuff back. He wanted a full restore and I don’t blame him. He had logged into WoW from a PC at work which had a keylogger on it, and something about a fake wowarmory or something where it asked him for his login/pw.. which Blizzard does request at times. As soon as the thief took the account the thief attached an authenticator of thier own, which further hindered my friend from getting back into his acct or getting it back. My friend protested so much with the tech helping him get his acct back that not only did he get a full restore, he also got 40 frost emblems, telling them that’s what he would have gotten in the time they took to restore. People just get an authenticator, it’s pretty cut and dry.
lol im gonna get a friend to take all my pally healing gear and take the care package hackers dont take pvp gear and i only pvp on my pally =D