Clock! wrote:nyachty wrote:I'm not a member anymore but when i did play I worked my life off for a headdress, as a kid i used to visit it every year to make sure its safe
this year i visited back and noticed my account was in a data breach,
whole account hackeddskad
like why hack aj
i miss the game but hh
I used to wonder why people would target a game like AJ for hacking, but now the reason kind of just slapped me in the face. Of course there's always just the fact that it is (or was) easy to breach, so "hackers in training" used it for practice, and of course there's the people who like to troll kids on the internet just because they can. But the biggest reason is simple; WildWorks is a pretty scummy company behind the scenes. Sure, they try to keep up a front that makes them seem like a good company that cares about its player base, but all the things I've seen in the past few weeks speak to the contrary. Clark Stacey basically outed himself as a money-hungry cryptobro, and all of the Glassdoor reviews from people who actually work or have worked for WildWorks paint a pretty bleak picture.
TL;DR, AJ gets hacked because people are trying to make WildWorks pay attention to all the bad things they've done.
i totally agree, one if the reasons why i quit. usually i don't play money hungry games, as its VERY clear they're money hungry. Memberships, etc. You cannot do anything without a membership, if I'll be honest.
Games from EA are also money hungry, but they don't force their players and fanbase to pay for things.
worst of all, they don't do anything about the hackers. they just alert you your password was breached, no hacker problem was actually removed. i haven't researched too well, as you have, but I know how much they dont do in contrast to what they do, do for the community.