Hacker Releases 1.7TB Treasure Trove of Gaming Info
mvar writes "According to Kotaku, a hacker named SuperDaeE who breached multiple gaming companies (Valve, Sony, MS to name a few) has released a 1.7TB treasure trove file for download. The file which contains source code for older titles plus development kits for the PS4 and Xbox One consoles, is encrypted and SuperDaeE claims that it is his insurance in case he gets arrested."
Right...cause if he gets in trouble, blackmail will surely get him out of it.
Now hackers everywhere have a reason to get SuperDaeE arrested.
> using centralized resource to distribute "insurance"
>> 2013
This sounds like too large of an "insurance" to be useful. Most people don't have the bandwidth or the space to hold 1.7 TB of encrypted info. Smaller files might make sense but not huge ones like this.
Taxation is legalized theft, no more, no less.
I totally believe it's possible to exfiltrate data from multiple game companies (or indeed any companies). But how do we know he didn't just upload a 1.7 TB encrypted blob of random garbage? The word of a 17-year-old script kiddie is not exactly a lot to go on.
[Sir Garlon] is the marvellest knight that is now living, for he destroyeth many good knights, for he goeth invisible.
Insurance in what sense?
1. Get arrested;
2. Release password to unencrypt source code for old software;
3. Get charged with yet another crime;
4. ???
"China: Bastion of civil rights." Has kind of a funny ring to it...
Peter predicted that you would "deliberately forget" creation 2000 years ago...
He's a minor himself. The "child pornography" could be pictures of his own dick for all we know, or a 17 year old girlfriend. The "drug" charges are "posession of cannabis and cannabis paraphernalia" so who gives a shit and the "weapons" charge was supposedly a stun gun. Not a taser, just one of those sparky things.
More to the point, unless the 1.7TB contains something of interest in the first place (ex: stolen source code that isn't encrypted), who is going to bother to download it? See, you have to give people an incentive to download that much shit before they are going to act as your own personal distributed storage service.
Bet when he gets arrested (not if), that there aren't any copies of his 'get out of jail card' in the wild.
Also, just for the record, have there ever been instances of anyone successfully blackmailing the cops into letting them go? Ever?
HA! I just wasted some of your bandwidth with a frivolous sig!