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Subject Item
n2:
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Recovery questions
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Recovery questions are a series of questions that only you know the answer to, so if somehow your password is stolen or lost, you can get your account back. You should NOT tell your recovery questions to anyone. If someone asks for your recovery questions, you should report them under Rule 3: Password Scamming. Try to avoid setting questions that have an obvious answer to them. For example, "What was the name of your first pet?". For people who know you, this would be quite obvious. Also, you are not allowed to set the same answer for all of the questions. Recovery questions are a series of questions that only you know the answer to, so if somehow your password is stolen or lost, you can get your account back. You should not tell your recovery questions to anyone. If someone asks for your recovery questions, you should report them under Rule 3: Password Scamming. Try to avoid setting questions that have an obvious answer to them. For example, "What was the name of your first pet?". For people who know you, this would be quite obvious. Also, you are not allowed to set the same answer for all of the questions. Recovery questions (or recoveries) are questions set by a player to reclaim the account in the event or losing the password or getting hacked. A player may select up to 5 questions personal to themselves that would not be known by others or easy to guess. Upon trying to recover a lost/hacked account, a player will be promted to event these questions (as well as many other questions regarding the account). If the request is successful, the player will regain access to the account.
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n3:abstract
Recovery questions (or recoveries) are questions set by a player to reclaim the account in the event or losing the password or getting hacked. A player may select up to 5 questions personal to themselves that would not be known by others or easy to guess. Upon trying to recover a lost/hacked account, a player will be promted to event these questions (as well as many other questions regarding the account). If the request is successful, the player will regain access to the account. It is possible to regain an account without setting recovery questions. However, it is a lot harder and much more information about the account (such as first/previous passwords, membership details, account creation times, etc) must be known. Therefore, Jagex strongly recommend setting recovery questions. It is against Rule 2 to ask a player to give out their recovery questions and against Rule 13 to ask questions that could be recovery questions. For example, asking "What are you recoveries?" is reportable under Rule 2; asking "What is your mother's maiden name?" os reportable under Rule 13. Recovery questions are a series of questions that only you know the answer to, so if somehow your password is stolen or lost, you can get your account back. You should not tell your recovery questions to anyone. If someone asks for your recovery questions, you should report them under Rule 3: Password Scamming. Try to avoid setting questions that have an obvious answer to them. For example, "What was the name of your first pet?". For people who know you, this would be quite obvious. Also, you are not allowed to set the same answer for all of the questions. Recovery questions are a series of questions that only you know the answer to, so if somehow your password is stolen or lost, you can get your account back. You should NOT tell your recovery questions to anyone. If someone asks for your recovery questions, you should report them under Rule 3: Password Scamming. Try to avoid setting questions that have an obvious answer to them. For example, "What was the name of your first pet?". For people who know you, this would be quite obvious. Also, you are not allowed to set the same answer for all of the questions.