Man Tracked Down and Arrested Via WoW
kabome writes with this excerpt from a story about an alleged drug dealer who was located by law enforcement thanks to World of Warcraft:
"Roberson’s subpoena was nothing more than a politely worded request, considering the limits of his law enforcement jurisdiction and the ambiguity of the online world. 'They don’t have to respond to us, and I was under the assumption that they wouldn’t,' said Roberson. ... Blizzard did more than cooperate. It gave Roberson everything he needed to track down Hightower, including his IP address, his account information and history, his billing address, and even his online screen name and preferred server. From there it was a simple matter to zero in on the suspect's location."
Not sure what is worse, the dealer, or Blizzard. I'd hazard a guess that Blizzard has ruined more lives than this dealer has. Though the cops will word a request to sound like a subpoena to the uninitiated.
"He's lost in a 'floyd hole"
Blizzard is giving information out to police outside of their jurisdiction? Privacy means nothing to these fucktards.
I wonder if Blizzard was released from liability through a TOS agreement on WOW. This shouldn't have been done without a subpoena.
One has to wonder, if Blizzard goes that far above and beyond requests of law enforcement and gives mountains of data in response to polite requests-- not even subpoenas-- how seriously do they take the privacy of *your* personal information?
I'm glad the bad guy got caught, etc, but handing over the keys to the kingdom to law enforcement without a subpoena implies, in my mind, that respect for users' privacy is simply not something Blizzard considers when they go about their business. Or rather, that such information is their property, not yours.
No need for invading our privacy.
It's my body, I decide what to do with it!
Plus, you'll get rid of the middleman, legalize drugs and there will be no need for dealers or drug gangs. The government WILL be the sole dealer of drugs, and due to economies of scales, they'll be able to sell them for far less than any dealer while making a good sum of money thanks to all the taxes.
GENERATION 25: The first time you see this, copy it into your sig on any forum and add 1 to the generation.
Penny Arcade did their thing about it.
It kind of sucks for that guy, but basically if you don't like laws, you'll usually be better off trying to change them than run away. There's generally nothing unethical about helping the police find someone who's accused of committing a crime.
Qxe4
“I did a search off the IPaddress to locate him,” said Roberson. “I got a longitude and latitude. Then I went to Google Earth. It works wonders. It uses longitude and latitude. Boom! I had an address. I was not able to go streetside at the location, but I had him.”
this doesn't seem accurate. ip address -> long/lat -> address? no chance. i can believe that they used his ip to find him, but probably through his ISP. In my experience, those geographic traces are only very rough estimates. sounds like this cop thinks he lives in CSI or something. i wonder if any of it is true?
Beware the Jubjub bird, and shun the frumious Bandersnatch.
And where does it end? Why not give them ALL the information you have on ALL of your users?
Blizzard should have given them only what the law compels them to provide. END OF STORY.
My DSL provider keeps giving me a dynamic IP address each time I connect. Hard to correlate that to my location (it is traceable to the isp though).
Frankly, the moral of the story is if you're wanted by the cops, don't use your real name, and don't move to a country with an extradition treaty with the US.
Just one drug dealer ratting out another. Move along, nothing to see here...
(There is supposed to be a Sarcmark® here, but my $1.99 check hasn't cleared, yet...)
Comment removed based on user account deletion
One has to wonder, if Blizzard goes that far above and beyond requests of law enforcement and gives mountains of data in response to polite requests-- not even subpoenas-- how seriously do they take the privacy of *your* personal information?
Well, though people do tend to gloss over the fine details in things like EULAs and Terms of Service, it's not as if Blizzard is hiding anything from its users. From the WoW Terms of Use:
C. Blizzard may, with or without notice to you, disclose your Internet Protocol (IP) address(es), personal information, Chat logs, and other information about you and your activities: (a) in response to a request by law enforcement, a court order or other legal process; or (b) if Blizzard believes that doing so may protect your safety or the safety of others.
Blizzard gets a request from law enforcement, Blizzard hands over the info, simple as that. (And actually, if it were my company I'd probably have a similar policy. A "polite request" is just about the only contact I'd ever want to have with law enforcement, and the sooner they disappear from my life the better.)
Breakfast served all day!
What's Blizzard going to do when someone posing as law enforcement gets some information and then goes and murders that person... Hmm?
Shh.
Did you understand the article? The subpoena had no force of law, as it was being served out of their jurisdiction. Done correctly, it would have had to have been served via the court in the jurisdiction the entity providing the information resided in - a California court, not an Indiana one. Because of time/funding/whatever issues, the sheriff didn't bother going that route, but instead sent what was in essence a request, not a subpoena.
Have you been touched by his noodly appendage?
Did YOU read the summary?
How about this part:
"Roberson’s subpoena was nothing more than a politely worded request, considering the limits of his law enforcement jurisdiction and the ambiguity of the online world. 'They don’t have to respond to us, and I was under the assumption that they wouldn’t,' said Roberson.
If you bothered to read the article, it's repeated there, as well. If it's just a "politely worded request" then use of the word subpoena was in error.
Definition of subpoena:
A subpoena (pronounced /sbpin/ or pronounced /spin/) is a writ issued by a court that commands the presence of a witness to testify, under a penalty for failure.
If they were able to legally enforce this, I doubt they would have bothered with said "politely worded request" - look at the TSA's use of subpoenas, for example.
Blizzard was subpoenaed:
“None of that information was sound enough to pursue on its own, but putting everything we had together gave me enough evidence to send a subpoena to Blizzard Entertainment. I knew exactly what he was playing — World of Warcraft. I used to play it. It’s one of the largest online games in the world.”
Due to the guy being in a different country, there was not a need to respond to it, but I guess that there would have been nothing to have stopped one being sought in Canada....
I heard that your library burnt down and destroyed your only two books - and one was not even coloured in yet.
Hightower? Is he related to Reno Hightower, van specialist?
He's an alleged drug dealer.
Which means he is not a drug dealer.
He is innocent.
(until proven guilty in a court of law, but that bit always gets left out)
He is pretty bad at wow too.
Look at his Armory.
http://www.wowarmory.com/character-sheet.xml?r=Bladefist&n=Rastlynn
Yea, because the county is going to spend hundreds of manhours extraditing a prisoner from Canada without enough evidence to convict. It's a done deal, call it for what it is.
Sir, I think we've located him, he's in Orgrimmar. Wait.... he just teleported in Thunder Bluff, he must be a mage, and he's talking to Cairne Bloodhoof. APB: Be on the look out for a level 65 undead mage wanted for selling Vision Dust and Dream Dust in the Orgrimmar Auction House. Be advised he's speced in Frost. Sir, I think we should send our undercover Troll Hunter with Humanoid Tracking to catch him.
I get the feeling this sheriff actually played WoW with the dealer and got upset/angry enough to chase him based on guild chat comments. How else would he know that the guy is in Canada and plays WoW? What sort of childhood friend would sell you out for a couple of drug dealing charges in such detail?
The cops totally camped this named spawn IRL
“They don’t have to respond to us, and I was under the assumption that they wouldn’t,” said Roberson. “It had been three or four months since I had sent the subpoena." Bullshit. Three or four months....Really. Given the current news http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/national/teen-found-after-meeting-his-42-year-old-online-soulmate/article1416257/ I have to wonder what we are not hearing about. I almost suspect Blizzard is in the process of cutting deals to keep out of trouble here in the states.
Did the police raid his house shouting "LEEEEROOOOOY!"
All I see is he's level 80, which seems pretty high to me (it's the cap, isn't it?). Can you explain how you can tell he's lousy in terms us non-WoW players can understand?
http://lkml.org/lkml/2005/8/20/95
Suspect was found by the help of Blizzard... if he is innocent, so be it, he will be found innocent. in such case he can stop playing WOW if he wants to. Otherwise, he is found guilty and Blizzard help find a criminal... either way, i say go Blizzard. If your a criminal and your playing WOW, they might give you up if asked so beware.
Damn, it's already hard enough to find a resto shammy, there goes another one...
This decision is just going to lead the game straight to ruin.
I imagine the total number of accounts that will be closed as a result of this incident will be somewhere around, well, one.
Assuming the guy goes to jail
And assuming they don't have WoW in jail.
Try complaining about how there admins act in World of Warcraft: you have to jump through all sorts of hoops, including providing a certified copy of a birth certificate or drivers license in order to dispute an email from one of their GMs. Blizzard have proved over and over that they can't be trusted (see both this story and their recent weasley responses to the Slashdot questions for recent examples). I've cancelled my WoW account and I dont see myself buying Starcraft 2 or Diablo 3. Blizzard can't be trusted.
Bad analogies are like waxing a monkey with a rainbow.
..then I look forward to Blizzard being sued for millions. Privacy appears to be one of those things that separates generations: I value my privacy yet it appears that anyone under 30 sees no value in it. Just because you're happy or stupid enough to have pictures of you giving your "boyfriend" a blowjob posted on facebook or to send nude pictures of yourself to you everyone in your school in no way reduces the value of my privacy. Free societies are not run for the convenience of the police.
Bad analogies are like waxing a monkey with a rainbow.
Nevermind the Internet angle, the real question here is an ancient one: should you cooperate with the police?
I think most of us would agree that law enforcement is necessary -- if you don't, you and I are never going to see eye to eye so you might as well stop reading now. Law enforcement needs information to work properly. If citizens universally refuse to provide that information, the only way to get it is via direct police surveillance.
So you've got three options: A) police act without any information, B) they set up ubiquitous surveillance to get their info, or C) they get information from citizens. I hope we all agree that C) is the lesser of evils.
So our society has set things up so that in certain very limited circumstances, people are *required* to give information to the police (search warrants, subpoenas, etc.) In other situations, police are forbidden from demanding certain kinds of information, to protect the rights of the accused. (Miranda laws, etc)
For everything in between, cooperation is optional and voluntary. We can decide whether to help or not, based on our sense of the severity of the crime, our personal ties to the suspect, our trust of the police, and any details of the case we're familiar with. It's a judgment call.
I think we need to respect the fact that different people or entities are going to make that judgment call differently, based on their own priorities and values.
To say that helping the cops is always the right or the wrong choice is ridiculously simplistic. You can comment on Blizzard's decision in this particular case, but tying it to some absurd moral absolute is asking for trouble.
Vimes had once discussed the Ephebian idea of 'democracy' with Carrot, and had been rather interested in the idea that everyone* had a vote until he found out that while he, Vimes, would have a vote, there was no way in the rules that anyone could prevent Nobby Nobbs from having one as well. Vimes could see the flaw there straight away.
*Apart from the women, children, slaves, idiots and people who weren't really our kind of people.
... Blizzard sells legal drugs (which you can have on your VISA statement) ...
that dealer apparantly sold illegal drugs .... which you rather don't want on your VISA statement ;)
--- I am known for the ones who want to find me on the net. Is that a privacy risk or a privilege? One might wonder..
from wow EULA and my clipboard lol
C. Blizzard may, with or without notice to you, disclose your Internet Protocol (IP) address(es), personal information, Chat logs, and other information about you and your activities: (a) in response to a request by law enforcement, a court order or other legal process; or (b) if Blizzard believes that doing so may protect your safety or the safety of others.
D. BLIZZARD MAY MONITOR, RECORD, REVIEW, MODIFY AND/OR DISCLOSE YOUR CHAT SESSIONS, WHETHER VOICE OR TEXT, WITHOUT NOTICE TO YOU, AND YOU HEREBY CONSENT TO SUCH MONITORING, RECORDING, REVIEW, MODIFICATION AND/OR DISCLOSURE. Additionally, you acknowledge that Blizzard is under no obligation to monitor Chat, and you engage in Chat at your own risk.
Complying with a legitimate legal request (subpoena, court order, order in council whatever) is completely different from handing over *someone else's* personal information just because someone asks.
Bad analogies are like waxing a monkey with a rainbow.
The fact is, the majority of the population favors keeping drugs illegal. If you want to change the law, all you have to do is convince people that drugs should be legalized.
Let me pick an example with which some Slashdot users might be more familiar: Do the majority of the people think copyright should last a century? I don't see any evidence of popular support for copyright term extension, but it passed anyway because the MAFIAA controls TV news and therefore federal elections. Likewise, the synthetic fiber and pharmaceutical industries can't stand a bit of competition from natural hemp and natural dronabinol, so they lobby against uses the cannabis plant.
Ideological organisations do not lobby? Labour unions do not lobby?
A big part of lobbying involves donating to legislators' reelection campaigns. Large corporations have a lot more money with which to do this than PACs covering consumer interests, and unlike with PACs, the public is often required to give money to a large corporation.
Well, how about drug use? Can you give me a rational argument for why any substance, taken willingly, should be banned?
A lot of drugs are banned because they make the user dangerous to other people while on them. Other drugs are banned simply because they aren't novel at the time they are discovered. This means there is no chance for a patent and therefore no way to finance the clinical trials involved in a new drug application.
Even if its partly Real World partly Virtual World (of course i would have the police tricked out and leveled to +10 of current max.)
Any person using FTFY or editing my postings agrees to a US$50.00 charge
The real moral of this story is that when you go on the run, you need to re-roll. If the guy had just grabbed a new copy of WoW for sub $20 and the expansions, then some game cards - he could have played all he wanted anonymously. On the run, hiding out alone in a different country, what better time to roll a FOTM and get leveling!
All those moments will be lost in time, like tears in rain.
Blizzard didn't bow. He agreed to this when he logged in. Its in the ToU.
I worked for a large ISP in the UK. We regularly received requests to take down user websites. The requests usually came from organisations which specialised in tracking down pornographic material of one form or another, or from injured parties who objected to content. Sometimes the police would contact us and ask for user details, though that was less common.
We (the ISP) would always take a look, and if there was any doubt about the material, it would be taken down. I recall one incident when one user posted an obviously mock threat to cause harm to a well known person. The police asked for and were given the address of the account associated with the IP of the person who posted the comment. There was no court intervention and the word of the police was accepted at face value. Don't kid yourselves. If you post salacious comments or questionable material but do not get a knock at the door, it isn't because your privacy is being protected. It is because there is too much material out there for the police to deal with.
Governments around the world are moving to implement legislation to allow the automatic blocking of specific websites (Australia is there already) and you can be sure that when the population is used to that, the ratchet will be tightened a notch or two more.
The days of freedom on the Internet are limited. Enjoy it while it lasts. You will conform.
"The police are working for us, they are our employees. "
That's a lie. If they were I could give them orders or have them fired. I can't. So they are not working for me. They are working for the state.
"I know this is a hard concept for some people to grasp,"
Its not hard, its just a lie.
"You of course know that police would stop arresting people for doing drugs as soon as we make selling drugs legal. It's our choice."
No its not. I was never asked. I have never had a choice. Its the state.
"The fact is, the majority of the population favors keeping drugs illegal."
Well, you haven't proven that - so for the moment we'll assume thats a lie as well, and only you are favoring that.
But even if the rest had that point of view, that would be *THEM* not *ME* and so not *US*
"Few politicians are willing to bring up the topic of legalization because they know they will be voted out of office if they do."
Because few politicians are competent.
If Google really cared they would fix Android Chrome to reflow text, instead of discriminating
That bit is about law not morality.
If Google really cared they would fix Android Chrome to reflow text, instead of discriminating
"Roberson’s subpoena was nothing more than a politely worded request"
So basically this Sheriff lied and misrepresented himself in order to trick Blizzard into revealing personal data? That is illegal in itself, btw. Or was there an actual court issued subpoena involved? I which case the court probably overstepped its authority.
I guess the cop also isn't as internet savvy as he thinks, since an IP address doesn't necessarily located a physical address.
Talbert explained that this online manhunt isn’t the first time his department has ventured onto the Internet to track down a suspect. Earlier this year, sheriff’s deputies used a phone number look-up Web site to find a man in North Carolina who was wanted on charges in Howard County. In that case, authorities found their suspect through an online classified ad on Craig’s List.
Wow. They discovered how to google a phone number! Are they really bragging about coming out of the dark ages?
You just proved you were 10 years old.
If Google really cared they would fix Android Chrome to reflow text, instead of discriminating
I am not really surprized. One of blizzard little nightmare has to be caught providing criminal networks with "law proof" communications system. The way pagers were used.
This is an MMO. There is no such thing as privacy in a MMO. You name, address, phone number, IP address and screen name are public information.
Next time you make a joke about child abuse/porn, drug or any kind of crime in chat... Think about the fact that it may be reviewed by people with humor deficit.
Somewhere, just for a few seconds, WoW got real, for someone.
That makes, imho, the moral thing to do becomes cooperation with the authorities, in all cases, even when you're not sure about the morality of their actions.
I believe that is the essentially the same argument employed by the defense at the Nuremberg Trials.
Orwell: "In a Time of Universal Deceit, telling the Truth is a Revolutionary Act"
"Stormwind, Azeroth. I work here. My name is Sir Lothar. I carry a mace."
he is horrible at WoW thats for sure...but here is my question...
why are we even discussing this? everyone that plays WoW agrees that blizzard is allowed to do what they did. if you click ACCEPT on the license agreements, then you have no argument against them doing what is stated in the agreement...
Are you suggesting marijuana, cocaine, etc are banned only because no one was able to patent them?
Coke and meth are not banned; they're in Schedule II. Amphetamine-like stimulants such as amphetamine mixed salts (Adderall), methylphenidate (Ritalin), and even methamphetamine (Desoxyn) are approved by the FDA for the treatment of attention deficit disorder. Cocaine also has FDA-recognized uses.
Dronabinol, the active ingredient in cannabis, wasn't scheduled down from Schedule I to Schedule II until Solvay Pharmaceuticals managed to patent the synthesis of dronabinol. It's Schedule III by now, and there is an open petition to the DEA to reschedule other dronabinol preparations used pursuant to FDA regulation.
Do you know a better place? Somewhere, where it is harder for the government to put your details together for reasons other than sheer incompetence or lack of computer equipment?
In Soviet Washington the swamp drains you.
People[1] in the United States care about what the TV tells them to care about. The TV's corporate masters have a vested interest in making people not care because they have a vested interest in expansion of copyright, and they use their control of TV news to make people care about things other than copyright.
[1] "A person is smart; people are stupid." -- Tommy Lee Jones as Agent K, Men in Black
We have a winner to settle all this moral posturing.
WoW, doesn't sound too good, but it was a drug dealer so I don't care. Long as they don' give out info on everyone.
Play this awesome flash game! Bunny Inv