So today I spoke with a supervisor GM and I gave him all the information I could on who is behind all these hack attempts. I believe he has forwarded this to the hacking investigation team. I also spoke to a customer support rep today about it and he said the most appropriate thing to do would be to forward any information/suspicions (backed with some sort of proof, of course) by e-mail to
hacks@blizzard.com. The customer service rep confirmed personally that he has seen someone get all of his accounts banned through this.
I figured that I might as well go and submit the information, but I know quite a number of the 15-19 twinking community members have been in contact with him and they can submit information as well. The more people that accuse him of hacking (with evidence), the more likely it is that he will be caught.
As far as I know, this is the correct information for the hacker:
Real ID name: Oscar Ning
Battletag: RustyABO#6750
Character names:
Twinkesaurus @ Barthilas - Community - World of Warcraft |
Twinkosaurus @ Barthilas - Community - World of Warcraft |
Freehandjøbs @ Barthilas - Community - World of Warcraft |
Lïfestealing @ Barthilas - Community - World of Warcraft
Include any information about when (date and time) he logged into your account or whispered you about trying to get on your account. They can check through the logs to see what he said. Be careful with this too, it can be a double edged sword. If you have said something about selling/trading accounts they will be able to see that as well.
The supervisor GM I spoke to was able to go through my chat logs and IP login info and verify that whoever was from this IP address was indeed trying to get onto other peoples' accounts by acting as Sneaky (me).
Hell, even if you don't have evidence, submitting something is better than nothing (if you want to see the hacker caught, that is).