I totally understand that if someone decides to be a regular internet user, then they have the responsibility of making sure that they're secure. It's incredibly easy to find 1 or more programs that practically take care of it for you if you don't click every link in your e-mail.faefrost said:Snip
That said, Blizzard does have some responsibility of ensuring that the data they hold of yours is secure as well. Because they do get hacked, independently of what passwords people use or whether they keep viruses/malware off of their computer. Here's some sauce about that:
http://www.gamespot.com/news/blizzard-confirms-battlenet-hacked-6391135
http://www.computerandvideogames.com/362286/blizzard-hacked-battlenet-data-stolen/
Links even state that the authenticators themselves were compromised. I feel personally that user and company are both obliged to secure their respective data. That said, I understand the argument totally that "if you need an authenticator at all, then it's a fail on your part." But the point here is that this isn't the whole picture. Before this became an issue, it isn't made clear before sale that you NEED the authenticator to take place in the RMAH. It would be different if someone got hacked and you pointed and said "well that's your fault, you don't keep viruses out of your computer/didn't buy an authenticator." This is being blocked from a major focus of the game whether you take precautions or not.
Granted, I don't have a smartphone or anything that runs "apps" that don't execute with sh or .exe. And I will admit that I'm still bitter about the whole thing. I'd need to spend an extra 6 bucks to plug in a USB stick in order to forcibly play Diablo online alone or otherwise, if I want to make money off of my non-MMO online game. I don't like the whole idea of Diablo being an RL money making venture, it just strikes me as them deciding to move the black market in-house and profit off of it continuing to happen. That aside, I apologize if that whole mindset causes me to be biased about this.