My sincerest apologies in advance to the moderators of /c/games if the below is not suitable for the community. This is extremely loosely related to gaming but concerns a significant player in the industry.
On the morning of Monday, 2024 11 25, I received a text message from my bank notifying me of a potentially fraudulent transaction of $0.00. This resembled some kind of a service test charge.
I was amused to see this was sufficient to trigger such a response from my bank. My account had been paused and my card transactions were halted as a result, though I’m grateful for their diligence.
Looking at the message, it appears to have been from Blizzard Entertainment:
The first time I dealt with them as a customer was around 2016 or 2017. Overwatch was on sale and my friends urged me to pick it up. It wasn’t my sort of thing and I quickly put it back down.
I was stupid enough to buy Destiny 2 later on in 2017. The long-timers (or most likely, former players) amongst you may recall that D2 was only available through BattleNet on PC. I think they moved away to Steam a couple years later after parting ways with Activision, and I linked my Steam account to complete the transfer around this time.
Fast-forward to October 2019 and the “Blitzchung controversy”. I don’t wish to expand on the topic here. I didn’t agree with Blizzard’s actions around that event, nor did I have any particular reason to retain my online account with them, so I decided to delete it in some extremely minor form of protest.
It seems that a significant number of account holders thought of doing the same thing, as Blizzard started to demand some form of government photo ID to proceed.
I can only presume they employed this tactic as some sort of deterrent, though I was fairly sure it couldn’t legally be enforced; what business did they have to ask this of me? They’ve never needed my drivers license or passport photo before?
After a lengthy back and forth with their support agents, I decided to send them a GDPR data erasure request instead. They immediately honoured my request and notified me that my account and all associated PII would be removed from their systems.
Just over five years later, and I’m randomly greeted with this fraud alert. Mondays are particularly busy for me, as I’m sure they are for many of you. I cursed as I glanced at phone that morning. I don’t need more stuff to deal with.
I immediately called my bank and rectified the situation, though I wanted to understand how this happened to begin with. Whilst I was still on the phone to them, I confirmed that:
I decided to write to Blizzard’s customer support. They appear to have a section dedicated to unauthorised payments. My endeavours were unsuccessful.
After explaining all of the above, I pressed them on several key points:
I wasn’t satisfied with the first response, so I tried again later on.
Check if you have an active World of Warcraft subscription
Couldn’t you folks have done that?
Check your recent purchases in your Transaction History
(I had already explained that I had done this as part of my initial query to them)
Make sure that you are logged in to the correct Blizzard account
“An extensive research” to be sure
All of these questions were completely sidestepped. I began to suspect that these were bot generated or generic, canned responses.
If you are indeed real people, and you somehow stumble upon this post, please know that I’m sorry to call you out, and I know you’re dealing with my case using the resources you have available.
I would love to know if any of you took the same action as I did back in 2019:
An associate of mine has pointed out that they may have a legal obligation to retain some records despite my request for data erasure. The question is, why was this service test charge placed?
Thank you for reading through my ramblings.
Have a cosy one.
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They don’t have to.
If they violated gdpr they’re going to go up against the UK’s lawyers. That’s a wonderful thing about consumer protection, the consumer doesn’t have to do anything other than make a complaint.
Nice. Hopefully they don’t get paid off to look the other way. I am not hopeful.
Pretty sure the only thing that happens when violating GDPR is a fine, which is ultimately the same thing as “paying off” the government, but just in a legally obligated way.
Well that’s because the ICO doesn’t have the teeth of my grandmother.