Scammers 2.0
By the_dog_god
Scammers, they keep getting smarter, keep finding new ways to exploit the
system, new ways to rob you of your hard earned Neopoints, new ways of sticking
your precious pet in the pound without you knowing what's happened until it's
too late. Of course, there are exceptions to this rule, for example, recently a
Neopian User realized they were being hacked mid-hack and requested the new
password to the account. They then changed the password and logged back in with
the new password. Afterwards they checked the trades set up and realized the
person offering junk on them was the hacker, using the hacker's username and the
password the hacker changed their account's too the hacked player managed to get
into the hacker's account and take his items back. You may read this and think
that if that hacker was dumb enough to do that then you'll be fine. Think again.
For every failed hack attempt there are dozens of successful ones, not to
mention the fact that the hacker in question will never make the same mistake
having learnt from their fault.
With the scammers constantly upgrading, it is up to each Neopian to take new
precautions to avoid their hard earned work being flushed down to the toilet by
somebody with nothing better to do than spend their life stealing virtual
dollars.
1. Check your current password.
Is it an actual English word ?? Is it less than 10 letters long ?? It is
comprised solely of letters ??The best passwords will answer no to all three of
those questions. Let's imagine your password is CO41S8uZ95. The odds of a person
randomly typing that in the password box for your account is 1 in (26 different
lower case English letters) + (26 different upper case English letters) + (10
different numbers) = 62 ^ 10. That roughly works out to be a 1 in
839,299,365,700,000,000 chance of randomly walking up and typing your password
in on their first try.
Even a program designed to guess a random combination of 10 letters (upper case
and lower case) and numbers would take years to guess your password
The odds however of a password guessing your password if it is something along
the lines of "Happy, Password, <insert your last name here>, Neopets or
Secretword" are significantly lower. However, for some baffling reason people
keep making their password easy to guess and every day at least one person loses
their account to somebody that puts in one of these words. If you can't remember
your password easily then write it down on a small slip of paper, do not write
anything with it. Just the password. Then put that password somewhere very safe
which you can easily access but not easily found by others. Got an old school
exercise book at home ?? Write your password into an exercise and remember where
in the book you wrote it down. To anybody that for some reason is reading
through your old work it will simply look like you worked something out on that
page.
Don't write something like "My Neopets.com password" next to your password
however.
Also, it's a good idea to change your password regularly.
2. Check your Email password and any Neopets related sites' passwords.
If your Neopets password is Sj11dFy0i3fn4mD201j42 but your Email password is
Password then all the scammer needs to do is break into your Email account and
request your password.
Additionally, do not use the same password you do on Neopets that you do on any
other site. Make sure your different accounts have different passwords as well.
It may be great to have a practically uncrackable password on Neopets but the
moment you enter it on another site it becomes access to the administrators of
that particular site. All it takes is the site to turn out to be run by a very
smart scammer or an admin that is bitten by the greed bug to have your password
discovered, and once it is you can kiss your hard work goodbye.
Additionally, make sure your gallery accounts etc all have different passwords.
It may hurt to have one account taken from you by a scammer, but if all your
account passwords are the same then your going to be suffering a LOT more.
3. Off site links. Don't trust 'em.
No matter what the person says, don't trust any off site links posted on
Neopets.com. Even image URLs can be dangerous.
The moment you leave Neopets.com, all the safety barriers put in place,
restricting HTML, CSS, Javascript etc, to protect your account vanish. You are
venerable in any off site link, no matter what the extension.
'Cookies' are text documents stored by your computer. They hold stored
information from websites to assist in browsing the web. For example, the moment
you log in to the PinkPT Forums a cookie will be produced by PinkPT and stored
on your computer. This cookie will contain your member ID and password. Now you
may be worried that anybody could walk up to your computer and read your
passwords from your cookie folder, don't. The cookies are so encrypted it would
take a very advanced decoder to translate it into understandable English.
'Cookie grabbers' are nasty little scripts that can be placed on websites.
Effectively they make a copy of your cookies in your cookie folder and store
them on the grabber's computer. Now, despite how encrypted the cookies may be,
all it takes is the grabber to shift the cookie into their cookies folder
and head to Neopets.com to gain instant access to your account.
Now that everybody understands that, you may have realized why offsite links are
bad. Anybody with a fair bit of computer knowledge can stick a cookie grabber on
their own personal site and refer people to it. The major problem people have
with cookie grabbers is when they think .jpgs, .gifs and .pngs (To name a few)
are safe. Surely the pictures themselves can't have the script in them ??
Technically you're right. Pictures aren't scripts, a cookie grabber is. However,
suppose the picture didn't exist. As you know, if a page doesn't exist and the
site you are on has a custom 404 page, you will be sent to the custom 404 page.
(IE : www.neopets.com/lookovertherebecausethispagedoesntexist.phtml ) Now, that
404 page does not have to be an image, and since it's not an image it can easily
have a cookie grabber stuck there without you knowing.
Basically don't trust outside links, if you are going to then read
this
article on defending yourself against Cookie Grabbers
4. Older accounts are not trustworthy either.
Surely old accounts wouldn't scam as their hard work would be wasted when they
are frozen right ?? Wrong. The original owner may have gotten sick of just
playing Neopets, though it is highly unlikely they'd scam from their original
account it can happen. More likely however, a scammer scammed the old account
and then used that to scam people.
You're just as likely to be scammed from a 40 month old account as you are from
a 2 week old account.
5. The staff are anti-sociable. They don't want to talk to you. If it sounds
too good to be true, it is.
Allow me to stress this point.
NEOPETS STAFF WILL NEVER EVER EVER EVER EVER EVER ASK FOR YOUR PASSWORD. THEY
WILL NEVER EVER EVER EVER MAIL YOU PRIVATELY FROM ANY ACCOUNT OTHER THAN
THENEOPETSTEAM WITHOUT YOU FIRST MAILING THEM!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
No matter how convincing the people sound, Neopets Staff won't use MSN or AIM.
They also won't mail you from any account other than theneopetsteam unless you
mail the staff member in question privately first.
Likewise, they will NEVER ask for your password. No matter how 'hacked the site
is' or how long they have 'to save the accounts before the site is deleted,' the
Neopets staff will never ask you for your password. A common Neomail scam is one
explaining that the site has been hacked and that the staff are trying to save
the information for as many accounts as possible before they shut the site down
and reboot it. Don't ask me how it works so often, it just does. The fact of the
matter is, moderators can find out all the information on your account with the
click of a button. They can find your password, previous pets, what you've fed
your pets over the past three years, what you've been warned for, they can read
your rejected Neopian Times articles, they can see who you've Neomailed in your
entire neo-life. Most importantly, THEY CAN FIND OUT YOUR PASSWORD WITH GREAT
EASE. No matter how hard it is to guess, they can simply click a button and
voila!
Don't trust anybody that claims to be a staff member, claims to be related to a
staff member, claims they have hacked Neopets, claims they have found a way to
make millions of Neopoints in seconds, claims to know the secret to the ancient
cave of Scurvy Island, Fyora's cave, Sloth's vault etc etc etc etc.
6. Never use the same Email address that you do to talk to people.
Create three Email accounts.
One for your real life affairs
One for people you want to talk to on Neopets
One for your password email.
Give out numbers one and two as much as you want but keep the third email
completely secret. For example, my Neopet's email address is
the_dog_god_is_weird@hotmail.com. I use that to talk to people from PinkPT,
Neopets, IDB etc...
However, I do NOT use it for my password recovery Email. I have a completely
unrelated Email address which I only use for recovering my lost password. DO NOT
TELL ANYBODY THIS EMAIL ADDRESS. DON'T HINT TOWARDS IT, DON'T MAKE REFERENCES
ABOUT IT, DON'T EVEN ACKNOWLEDGE THE FACT IT EXISTS TO ANYBODY OTHER THAN
YOURSELF.
That way, in the rare even your email address is hacked, you won't have any
chance of your Neopets Password being discovered.
7. If you refuse to follow number six.
For starters, everybody should be ignoring this section of the guide because you
WILL follow number six. However, if you want to make things needlessly risky and
use the same address for talking to people on Neopets and for password recovery
then beware of the following.
The moment you give out the password recovery Email address you open a door for
scammers.
A wondrous little feature of most Email accounts is the "secret" question. A
little question that supposedly will only be answerable by the creator of the
question. However, if a scammer finds your password recovery Email address then
they can request to see your "secret" question.
Once they see it, all it takes is a little planning on their behalf to have your
Neopets account.
Take this scenario:
"Secret Question": What is your favorite teacher's name ?
Sam : Ahhhhh!!
Mike : What ??
Sam : I forgot to do my research assignment!! I needed to interview somebody on
their school!!
Mike : Well what are the questions ??
Sam : What school do you attend ??
Sam : What year are you in ?
Sam : List your three favorite teachers in order
Sam : What subjects do they teach ??
Sam : List your three favorite subjects in order
Sam : Do the above two questions match ??
Mike : <insert answers here>
With the seemingly innocent homework assignment, Sam has gained access to Mike's
email account and gained access to Mike's Neopets account as a result.
8. Don't download anything anybody tells you to.
Key loggers are nasty little things which are hidden among seemingly harmless
files. You won't know you've got it until it's too late. Key loggers record
everything you type in on your computer and transmit it back to the person that
made the key logger. This means anytime you type your username, your password,
your favorite color, what you're wearing etc the scammer will know. All it takes
is a little search for your password and you've got instant scammage. Well no,
they've got instant scammage, you've got instant loss of account.
9. Don't log in to Neopets at any URL other than www.neopets.com/loginpage.phtml
It may sound stupid but don't log in at ANY URL other than www.neopets.com/loginpage.phtml
. Gone are the days in which anything not on www.neopets.com was obviously a
fake log in page. Nowadays very smart scammers can use programs to make the URL
appear to be a different domain. Namely they can make any address they want
appear to be www.neopets.com. However, they cannot go any further than this,
they can't make the page appear to be www.neopets.com/thisisreal.phtml. It has
to be the domain name only. Therefore, if you are browsing and you get asked to
log in and the address is www.neopets.com, it may seem safe. It's not.
Even if you know you are on Neopets.com, make a habit of manually going to
www.neopets.com/loginpage.phtml and then logging in. If you are logged out and
browsing the site, you will eventually come to page which you need to be logged
in to view. Even though you know you are on Neopets.com, go to the login URL and
then login. Then go back to the page you want. It may seem stupid, but it's
better to be safe than sorry.
10. Shop and giveaway scams.
So you're browsing along when suddenly you see a Codestone for 3,000 Neopoints.
Quick as a flash you click into the shop and buy the item without looking. The
next page you find yourself with a brand new codestone and 30,000 Neopoints less
than before.
If the price of an item changes whilst you are in the shop then you will
be notified and the transaction will be cancelled. However, if the price changes
between the time in which you see it on the shop wizard and the time in which
the shop itself loads, you will NOT be notified. Scammers will often change
items priced at things like 2.222 to prices like 22,222. People in a rush to
snatch up the deal will usually not notice the change and will end up being
ripped off. Always check the price of an item before buying it.
Another thing to be aware of is ridiculously low priced items. If you see a
H4000 Helmet for sale, priced at 1 NP then there is a good chance it has been
stolen or duplicated during a glitch. No matter who is responsible for the item
being duplicated/scammed etc, if you are caught with it in your possession you
will be frozen. The best idea is to leave it in the shop. However, if you are
willing to gamble your entire account on it, then buy it and stick it in your
trades with the message
"TnT : I bought this from -'s shop on --/--/-- for -- Neopoints. I do not know
whether or not the item is safe or not to use. Please delete the item if it has
been duplicated or return it to it's original owner if it has been scammer or
hacked."
Then submit a bug report to Neopets with the trade lot in the message, further
outlining the details of how you came across the item.
DO NOT ATTEMPT TO DISPOSE OF THE ITEM BY YOURSELF.
Sticking the item in the Money Tree, Discarding it, Selling/Trading or Giving it
away may result in you being frozen.
Giveaways are NOT permitted on Neopets. By taking part in one or running one you
are breaking the Neopets rules. Most of them are scams to get people to donate
to a prize fund and then leave with the donations. If you see one, tell the user
not to run it. If they persist, report it to Neopets and let them take care of
it.
Other things to be aware of:
Not all scammers are there to make Neopoints for themselves. Some scammers will
scam you just to make you miserable. These are the types that have your account
permanently frozen by breaking a severe rule whilst in your account, disown your
pet, discard your items etc. If you take all the precautions listed above they
should not be able to get into your account, but they can have your account
frozen if you yourself are not careful.
Chain letters are started by such scammers. By posting this message in one
billion posts all you would have gained is a sore finger from pressing Ctrl-V
multiple times. The fact of the matter is, to stop chain letters, Neopets' has
to take action against ANYBODY that posts a chain letter. Even if you've only
posted one and somebody else has posted 20, you are just as liable to be
punished for them.
No matter how many blood-thirsty Vampires, Ghosts or Werewolves are going to
attack you, no matter how many millions of Neopoints you 'will get' from posting
the chain letter, no matter how real the 'code' sounds the bottom line is CHAIN
LETTERS DO NOT WORK.
People that think they are funny by posting things like "Post this in 10
messages and be frozen" are just as bad. People see that and think 'Heh! That
was funny, I'm going to do the same thing.' So they wait for a couple of hours
and post the same thing once you've gone offline. They get a few laughs and do
it again, in the meantime somebody else sees the message, thinks it's funny and
continues the cycle. No matter how original you think it is, it's a chain letter
and effectively you are scamming people into potentially getting their account
frozen for posting a chain letter, despite the fact you were making fun of
people that post chain letters.
People that encourage you to do things that are against the rules are also
scammers. By giving into their peer-pressure to 'run a giveaway' or 'tell that
religious joke you told me yesterday on the Neoboards' you are risking your
account being frozen. You may feel they aren't scamming you out of anything but
the result will be the same. You will eventually lose your account, just like
you would have if you had screamed your password on the Neoboards.
Don't make any hints towards your password or give it out. It's a given, but
you'd be surprised...
Remember, scammers are constantly finding new ways to scam people. Reading
articles like these gives you some protection against their scams but also gives
them things to look out for. A good rule of thumb is this checklist :
Am I giving them anything ?? Password, Email or Item ??
Does it seem too good to be true ??
Does it involve me having to go to an offsite link ??
If you answered yes to any of the above then be on your guard. It could easily
be a scam without you realizing.
I strongly suggest you read the other articles on PinkPT. Even the outdated
ones, though the information may be old, they still give some good advice on how
to avoid losing your hard earned Neopet's account.


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