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Hacker Who Stole Half-Life 2's Source Code Interviewed For New Book (arstechnica.com)

"Can you love a game so much you must take its sequel?" asks Ars Technica, posting an excerpt from the new book "Death By Video Game: Danger, Pleasure, and Obsession on the Virtual Frontline." At 6am on May 7, 2004, Axel Gembe awoke in the small German town of Schonau im Schwarzwald to find his bed surrounded by police officers bearing automatic weapons... "You are being charged with hacking into Valve Corporation's network, stealing the video game Half-Life 2, leaking it onto the Internet, and causing damages in excess of $250 million... Get dressed..." The corridors were lined by police, squeezed into his father's house...
Gembe had tried creating homegrown keystroke-recorders specifically targeted at Valve, according to the book, but then poking around their servers he'd discovered one which wasn't firewalled from the internal network. Gembe spent several weeks discovering notes and design documents, until eventually he stumbled onto the latest version of the unreleased game's source code. He'd never meant for the code to be leaked onto the internet -- but he did share it with another person who did. ("I didn't think it through. The person I shared the source with assured me he would keep it to himself. He didn't...")

Eventually Gembe contacted Valve, apologized, and asked them for a job -- which led to a fake 40-minute job interview designed to gather enough evidence to arrest him. But ultimately a judge sentenced him to two years probation -- and Half-Life 2 went on to sell 8.6 million copies.

9 of 192 comments (clear)

  1. Automatic weapons for an illegal download. by Shadow+of+Eternity · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Can we talk about that? Someone guessed Gabe Newell's password, downloaded some files, leaked them to the internet, and the response to this was to send a small army of heavily armed stormtroopers with automatic weapons to take him into custody with an absurd display of force.

    That should be the real story here. We've gone past "corporate personhood" and into "corporate godhood", we're treating people whose only crime was potentially costing a fantastically wealthy corporation some pitiful percently of their quarterly profits the same way we treat active shooters and terrorists in the middle of an attack.

    --
    A bullet may have your name on it but splash damage is addressed "To whom it may concern."
  2. Re:lack of international cooperatiom by Shadow+of+Eternity · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Because he caused a corporation to hypothetically lose some money, the worst possible crime in the US, and the Germans didn't want to see someone get some wildly disproportionate 50 year sentence for that.

    --
    A bullet may have your name on it but splash damage is addressed "To whom it may concern."
  3. Re:it wuz haxx0rz! by davester666 · · Score: 3, Interesting

    He forgot to repeat "I didn't think it through" when he called Valve, told them he hacked into their server, copying the source code to their product, resulting in the source code for their main product being released publicly, and then asked for a job.

    Is there any company where that situation would happen and it ends with "you're hired!"

    --
    Sleep your way to a whiter smile...date a dentist!
  4. Re:lack of international cooperatiom by Feral+Nerd · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I don't see any way the actions of the German authorities were justified to prevent the hacker from being charged and standing trial in the United States.

    US courts have a tendency to hand down draconian sentences for even trivial infractions thanks to the 'come down on him like a ton of bricks' attitude to justice among politically ambitious US judges and prosecutors. This has resulted in an extreme reluctance in other countries to extradite people to the US in cases where there is any chance that the prisoner might receive 25 years to life just to further some US offiial's political ambitions for something he'd get a 5 year sentence for in Europe .

  5. Re: it wuz haxx0rz! by mSparks43 · · Score: 3, Interesting

    The nsa, on multiple occasions.

  6. Re:lack of international cooperatiom by bkmoore · · Score: 4, Informative

    .... I don't see any way the actions of the German authorities were justified to prevent the hacker from being charged and standing trial in the United States. This is a pretty straightforward application of how international cooperation between law enforcement agencies is supposed to work, yet Germany didn't let that happen.

    Germany generally won't extradite their own citizens to stand trial in a foreign country. This has some cultural significance because the DDR (East Germany) used to extradite citizens to the USSR for alleged political crimes.

  7. Re:lack of international cooperatiom by houghi · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Due to the fact that judges are elected, you get people that are in for revenge, not for justice.

    I see it as offical mob justice. "Hang em high" is what they voted for and that is what you get. That does not mean that it is in any way reasonable.

    --
    Don't fight for your country, if your country does not fight for you.
  8. Re:it wuz haxx0rz! by NotDrWho · · Score: 3, Insightful

    He forgot to repeat "I didn't think it through" when he called Valve, told them he hacked into their server, copying the source code to their product, resulting in the source code for their main product being released publicly, and then asked for a job.

    Is there any company where that situation would happen and it ends with "you're hired!"

    Never underestimate the naivete and gullibility of a young person with a dream. Even as we speak, there are tens of thousands of kids across the country taking out huge student loans to get degrees that will barely qualify them for barista jobs at Starbucks--all because someone told them to "pursue your dreams" without adding the vital addendum "But have a realistic backup plan."

    --
    SJW's don't eliminate discrimination. They just expropriate it for themselves.
  9. Re:lack of international cooperatiom by jordanjay29 · · Score: 4, Funny

    No, just a half life.