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Hackers Lulzsec Take Eve & Minecraft Offline

mines5.jpg

Update 2: League of Legends is the latest target. Its login servers are currently down, with its website also apparently suffering.

Update 1: Notch has told us that “Looks like we’re back up.. I just hope it lasts!”

Following yesterday’s Bethesda incursion, and earlier attacks on the likes of Sony and Nintendo, hacker collective Lulzsec have targeted further games and gaming services today. Over the last couple of hours, they’ve taken out first Eve Online and then Minecraft’s login servers, as well as knocking out gaming site The Escapist.

This seems to have stemmed from Lulzsec’s open call for target suggestions on Twitter earlier today, which itself followed their takedown of The Escapist in response to negative comments threads about them there.

Both games are offline for the time being (edit- Minecraft appears to be working again for now). Minecraft’s site is still up as I write, but Eve’s is not. CCP have confirmed that “EVE Online and related services are currently offline, to return ASAP after investigation of some issues.” The prevailing sentiment has it that these are DDoS attacks, which may mean the games can come back online relatively soon.

Lulzsec are referring to this on Twitter as ‘TitanticTakeoverTuesday‘ and claim they’re still going through requests – so one can only presume this is not over yet.

EVE, Minecraft e League of Legends tudo no mesmo dia

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do minecraft no info was stolen just a ddos

mas ja ha uma nova hoje

Lulzsec opens hack request line

The hacker group Lulz Security has opened a telephone request line so its fans can suggest potential targets.

It claims to have launched denial of service attacks on several websites as a result, although it did not detail which ones.

The unspecified hacks formed part of a wave of security breaches that the group called Titanic Takeover Tuesday.

LulzSec has risen to prominence in recent months by attacking Sony, Nintendo and several US broadcasters.

The group publicised the telephone hotline on its Twitter feed.

Callers to the US number are met with a recorded message, in a heavy French accent, by an individual calling themself Pierre Dubois.

While the 614 area code appears to relate to the state of Ohio, it is unlikely that this is its real location.

Lulz Security said it had used distributed denial of service attacks (DDoS) against eight sites suggested by callers.

It also claimed to have hit the websites of gaming magazine The Escapist, and multiplayer games EVE Online and League of Legends.

DDoS attacks typically involve crashing a website by inundating it with requests from computers under the attacker's control.

It is unclear, in this instance, if LulzSec went beyond overloading the sites and sought to gain access to information stored on their servers.

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O que estes grupos de hackers fazem é tornar público que os ataques podem ser feitos, são feitos, e são "fáceis" de fazer.

Ao fazerem isto estão a mostrar o quão pouco seguros estão os dados confidenciais que as empresas guardam.

O que isto quer dizer é que provávelmente qualquer hacker que consiga e queira acede a esses dados e faz o que quer com eles.

Assim ao fazerem grandes ataques e mostrarem ao mundo, obriga as empresas a melhorarem o seu sistema e a reforçar a segurança dos dados confidenciais dos clientes.

Tudo de bom.

Melhor assim do que simplesmente acederem aos vossos dados sem nunca saberem disso.

A cena da sony é um fail do crl. Com ataques simples que qualquer um consegue, acedia-se a cartões de crédito.

Se vocês acham que a culpa é dos hackers e não da sony por não saber guardar os dados, estão enganados.

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novo ataque

New Lulzsec Attacks On WoW, Newerth, Eve

wowguild2.jpg

Yesterday’s denial of service attacks on Minecraft, Eve Online and League of Legends do not appear to be the end of hacker collective Lulzsec’s attempts to force online games offline. Heroes of Newerth’s login server was named a victim around an hour ago, shortly followed by the group declaring its intention to target Eve again tonight. That may of course be a double-bluff, but keep it in mind if you’re intending to play tonight.

Then, just moments ago, they stated that they were now rerouting calls to their ‘requests’ phone number to World of Warcraft’s customer support line. They claim their line, alleged by some to be a premium rate number, receives between 5 and 20 calls a second at present. Whether this signals an impending attack on WoW itself remains to be seen, but the group currently appear to be focusing efforts on phone rerouting.

and this is why games should have a lan option ^^

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O que estes grupos de hackers fazem é tornar público que os ataques podem ser feitos, são feitos, e são "fáceis" de fazer.

Ao fazerem isto estão a mostrar o quão pouco seguros estão os dados confidenciais que as empresas guardam.

O que isto quer dizer é que provávelmente qualquer hacker que consiga e queira acede a esses dados e faz o que quer com eles.

Assim ao fazerem grandes ataques e mostrarem ao mundo, obriga as empresas a melhorarem o seu sistema e a reforçar a segurança dos dados confidenciais dos clientes.

Tudo de bom.

Melhor assim do que simplesmente acederem aos vossos dados sem nunca saberem disso.

A cena da sony é um fail do crl. Com ataques simples que qualquer um consegue, acedia-se a cartões de crédito.

Se vocês acham que a culpa é dos hackers e não da sony por não saber guardar os dados, estão enganados.

Tudo dito! :clap:

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os gajos leakaram um txt de 2.5 megas com emails e passwords...

:ranting:

isto é suposto ter piada?

já circulam print screens de contas de facebook adulteradas, falsas encomendas à amazon, Paypal... enfim...

Edited by cyberurbis
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pois mas é precisamente esse tipo de reacção que eles querem...

se não lhes derem nada eles aborrecem-se

A conta do twitter deles é a maior prova disso..

Estes LulzSec devem ser uma cambada de putos geeks, frustrados com a vida e zangados com a comunidade de jogos online.

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os gajos leakaram um txt de 2.5 megas com emails e passwords...

:ranting:

isto é suposto ter piada?

já circulam print screens de contas de facebook adulteradas, falsas encomendas à amazon, Paypal... enfim...

:lol:

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os gajos leakaram um txt de 2.5 megas com emails e passwords...

:ranting:

isto é suposto ter piada?

já circulam print screens de contas de facebook adulteradas, falsas encomendas à amazon, Paypal... enfim...

:lol:

Não sei onde é que está a piada nisso, mas ok.

2100 downloads in 4 minutes. Better move fast before someone pillages all 62,000 from that list. :3

Depois é só ver putos estupidos e ignorantes a fazer download da lista e a percorrem lista abaixo combinações possíveis em vários sites.

Já vi falarem que acederam a contas do Facebook, Paypal, Amazon, pr0n sites, dating sites, enfim.. Uma violação do crl.

Sabes lá se o teu email não está no meio daqueles 62 mil?

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os gajos leakaram um txt de 2.5 megas com emails e passwords...

:ranting:

isto é suposto ter piada?

já circulam print screens de contas de facebook adulteradas, falsas encomendas à amazon, Paypal... enfim...

:lol:

Não sei onde é que está a piada nisso, mas ok.

2100 downloads in 4 minutes. Better move fast before someone pillages all 62,000 from that list. :3

Depois é só ver putos estupidos e ignorantes a fazer download da lista e a percorrem lista abaixo combinações possíveis em vários sites.

Já vi falarem que acederam a contas do Facebook, Paypal, Amazon, pr0n sites, dating sites, enfim.. Uma violação do crl.

Sabes lá se o teu email não está no meio daqueles 62 mil?

Não está. :coolmusic:

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Bioware hacked, data taken from... decade-old Neverwinter forum?

Now that we live in a world where everyone is going to get hacked at some point, it's apparently Bioware's turn. The company has released a statement detailing an attack and the amount of data that was stolen by the guilty parties. It's not as bad as it could have been, but this is a disclosure no company wants to make.

The hacker gained access to a "decade-old" community server that handled the Neverwinter Nights forum. "We have determined that no credit card data was compromised, nor did we ever have or store sensitive data like social security numbers," Aaryn Flynn, the Studio GM of BioWare Edmonton wrote on the official forum. "However hackers may have obtained information such as user account names and passwords, e-mail addresses, and birth dates of approximately 18,000 accounts—a very small percentage of total users."

Those accounts have been e-mailed, and their EA Account passwords have been reset as an additional security measure. If you haven't received an e-mail, you should be safe.

In terms of hacks, this is very much like busting into a nice boutique and only stealing socks, but it's still disconcerting to see yet another company victimized by hackers. As always, remember to use different passwords for each forum account or service you use, and pay close attention to charges made on your credit and debit cards. This attack didn't end with the theft of financial data, but you never know who's going to fall next. Vigilance is your best weapon.

this is getting old

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