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EVE Online Rocked by 700 Billon ISK Scam

Martin Spamer writes "The space MMOG EVE Online, where mining rock plays a big part of the economy, has recently been hit by a huge in-game scam. The aftermath of the EIB scam... was 700 Billion ISK, which might raise some $119,000 USD if sold on Ebay. (The current conversion rate is 100M ISK to 18 USD.) These events have prompted claims of player deaths, death threats, and speculation about What Would You Do With 700 Billion ISK?"

6 of 154 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Er... by LotsOfPhil · · Score: 5, Informative
    It took a while, but...
    1) Player Cally starts the EVE Investment Bank in early 2006
    2) A lot of drama goes on in the mean time with people sticking up for the EIB and others calling it a scam
    3) Cally's owner decides it's been long enough and cleans out the bank, netting around 700bil in ISK and another 100bil in assets
    That's really all the high points.
    --
    This post climbed Mt. Washington.
  2. I love it by Kesch · · Score: 5, Interesting

    It's interesting to watch all the scams that go on in Eve, I consider it a great social experiment.

    There are three main features of Eve that create this situation.

    1. Easy-to-use player run capitalist system. (It's easy for anyone to start up and manage a business)
    2. Zero laws against corporate fraud (As pure as capitalism gets)
    3. Anonymity from victims. (It's a lot easier to rationalize ripping off people in a virtual world.)

    Combined together these factors have lead to some amazing corporate frauds and espionage.

    I don't have time/effort myself to invest in Eve, but it's still fun to read what determined Eve players go to lengths to achieve.

    (A thought occured to me while typing this. Someone should offer some sort of contract in Eve. Either it can be done through CCP with GMs backing it and they could even charge for it, or a sufficiently large and militarized corporation could sell contract enforcement. Maybe this has already been done, otherwise feel free to steal this idea and try to make some isk with it.)

    --
    If this signature is witty enough, maybe somebody will like me.
  3. Perpetrator confessed to it by aafiske · · Score: 5, Interesting

    One of the interesting aspects is that the person who pulled the scam said so, publicly. And said who his main character is. One of the flaws in the game is that in theory, he could have transferred this money to another character he owned and been utterly untracable. But he came out and said 'I did it, these were the handful of characters I used, this is my main who I always play with'.

    More interesting, he's set a bounty on himself of 1.2 bil and gone out looking for fights. (You collect the bounty if you blow up his ship, then catch his pod and blow that up too. A little tricky, but not impossible.) With 700bil in the bank, he can afford pimpin' ships and the best gear, and not worry about when he loses them. He's already been found and podded once (by some members of the Mercenary Coalition, if anyone's curious), not sure if he's going to keep bountying himself. Given his attitude, I suspect he will, since he's looking for a fight and pvp experience.

    1. Re:Perpetrator confessed to it by blueZhift · · Score: 5, Interesting

      You just gotta love this! Beyond some simple scam, it sounds like this guy is essentially creating game content in the form of this continuing drama. In an age of reality tv shows, this is just perfect.

  4. Re:What was the scam? by Snowmit · · Score: 5, Informative

    I play eve.

    Phase 1: Cally opens up EIB and does an IPO on it. Many people get excited, lots of people invest, lots more people begin to store saving there.
    Phase 2: Cally builds reputation and Bank starts to seem like one of the cornerstones of Eve's burgeoning investment market. To this day it's not clear how much of that was legitimate and how much was pyramid goodness.
    Phase 3: A character named Currin Trading runs a scam and makes off with 30 billion ISK (the largest scam ever at the time)
    Phase 4: Word gets out that Currin Trading was a scam, Currin Trading posts a very long explanation of the whole scam and ends it with another shocking revelation: EIB is also a scam! He recognizes all the signs because it's so much like his own scam.
    Phase 5: Forum drama.
    Phase 6: Insane forum drama.
    Phase 7: Cally's faked a) hospitalization, b) incarceration c) death in very short sequence.
    Phase 8: EIB is revelaed to be a scam, Dentara Rast is revelaed to be Cally's main (players can have up to three character per account) much gloating occurs. He puts a billion ISK bounty on his own head and goes out to fly PVP with the most expensive ships and equipment he can find (in Eve, if your ship blows up you lose it entirely).
    Phase 9: Slashdot!

    It should be noted that scams are an accepted part of the Eve game mechanics. Eve is ruthelessly PvP in combat and in the marketplace. It seems as though this was an entirely legitimate (in an EULA sense of the word) scam and that Dentara Rast will get off free and clear.

    --
    I have a lot of opinions about Cyborgs and Architects
  5. obOfficeSpace by Rectum2003 · · Score: 5, Funny

    What Would You Do With 700 Billion ISK? Two chicks at the same time. Darn straight. Two chicks at the same time.