Gold Farming A $500 Million Industry

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Andy Chalk

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Nov 12, 2002
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Gold Farming A $500 Million Industry


A new study at Manchester University [http://www.manchester.ac.uk/] says the gold farming "industry" is likely worth about $500 million per year, and is growing rapidly despite efforts to curtail the activity.

Roughly 400,000 people are estimated to be employed as gold farmers, according to report author Professor Richard Heeks, and while 80 percent are based in China, gold farming has also become a "significant economic sector" in some developing nations. "I initially became aware of gold farming through my own games-playing but assumed it was just a cottage industry," he said. "In a way that is still true. It's just that instead of a few dozen cottages, there turn out to be tens of thousands."

Heeks said accurate numbers were difficult to determine because of the pseudo-criminal nature of gold farming, and that while his estimate was reasonable based on the information available, the value of the gold farming business could actually be twice as large. He added that gold farming had already grown to a size comparable to India's outsourcing industry, saying, "The Indian software employment figure probably crossed the 400,000 mark in 2004 and is now closer to 900,000. Nonetheless, the two are still comparable in employment size, yet not at all in terms of profile."

Despite the booming business, gold farmers themselves aren't getting rich, earning an average of only $145 per month, according to Heeks' numbers. Even so, Secure Play [http://www.secureplay.com/] boss Steven Davis says the variations in pay between nations is resulting in a wage-based hierarchy among gold farmers, citing as an example Vietnamese farmers who will provide their services to Chinese gamers at a lower wage than Chinese farmers charge Western players. "It's moving down the chain," he said.

Davis added that gold farming has been around in one form or another since the earliest days of online gaming, and is both inevitable and extremely difficult to stop because it meets a real demand in the player community. "When you get people with more money than time and time than money, the two will find a way to meet," he said. "You could get rid of it, but you would get rid of one of the most fundamental parts of player-to-player interaction."

Professor Heeks' study, entitled Current Analysis and Future Research Agenda on "Gold Farming": Real-World Production in Developing Countries for the Virtual Economies of Online Games, is available in full here [http://www.sed.manchester.ac.uk/idpm/research/publications/wp/di/di_wp32.htm].

Source: Gamasutra [http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/technology/7575902.stm]


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Hawkzor

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Jan 31, 2008
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Its hard to wrap my mind around half a billion dollars, let alone half a billion dollars in something as ridiculous as gold farming. If morons want to flush real money down the toilet in exchange for digital currency let em.
 

WNxSajuukCor

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Oct 31, 2007
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As long as people buy gold and items online for real world money us legit players will still suffer. Over-inflation on the auction blocks, area mobs farmed clean on a constant basis, and the constant upon constant mass of whispers for their services every ten minutes.

It's a modern day sweat shop. $145 a month? That's $36.25 a week while fat cats earn six figures off their dirty deeds. Not to mention many of the gold farming "businesses" practice in account theft and such as well so they can earn their daily minimum.
 

Hawkzor

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Jan 31, 2008
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WNxSajuukCor post=7.69550.663746 said:
As long as people buy gold and items online for real world money us legit players will still suffer. Over-inflation on the auction blocks, area mobs farmed clean on a constant basis, and the constant upon constant mass of whispers for their services every ten minutes.

It's a modern day sweat shop. $145 a month? That's $36.25 a week while fat cats earn six figures off their dirty deeds. Not to mention many of the gold farming "businesses" practice in account theft and such as well so they can earn their daily minimum.
The same is true for so many industries throughout the world. I don't buy gold online but I still buy cloths, shoes, cell phones and iPods. If I were a 13 year old living in a third world country I would much rather be earning money playing WoW than earning the same amount (or less) harvesting sugar canes on some farm.

Still, people should goto jail for account theft. If I paid for three months or a year of service only to have my password swiped and my account lost I'd be pretty mad.
 

geddydisciple

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Aug 25, 2008
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WNxSajuukCor post=7.69550.663746 said:
Still, people should goto jail for account theft. If I paid for three months or a year of service only to have my password swiped and my account lost I'd be pretty mad.
If someone is stupid enough to give their account info to a complete stranger they deserve to have the account stolen.
 

WNxSajuukCor

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geddydisciple post=7.69550.663930 said:
Hawkzor post=7.69550.663746 said:
Still, people should goto jail for account theft. If I paid for three months or a year of service only to have my password swiped and my account lost I'd be pretty mad.
If someone is stupid enough to give their account info to a complete stranger they deserve to have the account stolen.
Those are just a small fraction of the thefts. The majority is through keyloggers and other malicious software that gets on your computer one way or another. Sometimes the keylogger is straight on the gold selling sites, others are hidden away in banner ads that show up on legit sites.
 

T3chn0s1s

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Aug 17, 2008
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geddydisciple post=7.69550.663930 said:
Hawkzor post=7.69550.663746 said:
Still, people should goto jail for account theft. If I paid for three months or a year of service only to have my password swiped and my account lost I'd be pretty mad.
If someone is stupid enough to give their account info to a complete stranger they deserve to have the account stolen.
Y'know, I agree with ya' there, but those who are practicing account theft aren't going to just ask for a username and password... Contrary to popular belief, MOST gamers actually aren't stupid, and those who are tend to have more money to buy a new copy of the game and then just ***** on a forum. They practice underhanded tactics such as keylogging and planting trojans through accessing their online help, or their page proper. Granted, most of us have a means to stop that sort of thing from getting to our accounts, but many more are just gamers... Not people who have the slightest idea what a computer is other than a 'magical game box that I kin lukz at my interwebs on'.


Edit: Darn, beat to the punch. ^_-
 

Hawkzor

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Jan 31, 2008
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My last girlfriend got really into World of Warcraft. She didn't know the first thing about key logging or account safety, she just wanted to have fun playing the game. If her account had been stolen I wouldn't have blamed her. There is a line when it comes to ignorance, people can only be expected to know so much.
Its funny, someone like her wouldn't care about the markup on items in auction house so she doesn't even notice gold farming's effect on a game. But gold farmers can still try to steal her account. Theres no winning, or ignoring it.
 

stompy

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Jan 21, 2008
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j-e-f-f-e-r-s post=7.69550.663757 said:
Hang on, we're not talking about real gold here are we?
Nope... I can't believe people in the real world are this sad...