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Final Fantasy maker Square Enix hacked

Discussion in 'Chit Chat' started by Joanna, May 14, 2011.

  1. Joanna

    Joanna Well-Known Member
    Valued Member

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    This is getting to be epidemic. They really need stronger laws to deal with these losers.
    BBC News - Final Fantasy maker Square Enix hacked

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    13 May 2011 Last updated at 13:20 E
    Final Fantasy maker Square Enix hacked

    Hackers have broken into two websites belonging to Japanese video games maker Square Enix.

    The company confirmed that the e-mail addresses of up to 25,000 customers who had registered for product updates may have been stolen as a result.

    Resumes of 350 people applying for jobs in its Canadian office could also have been copied from the web servers.

    Square Enix, which makes the popular Final Fantasy, Deus Ex and Tomb Raider games, apologised for the breach.

    In a statement, it said: "Square Enix can confirm a group of hackers gained access to parts of our Eidosmontreal.com website as well as two of our product sites.

    "We immediately took the sites offline to assess how this had happened and what had been accessed, then took further measures to increase the security of these and all of our websites, before allowing the sites to go live again."

    It is understood that the websites affected were Eidosmontreal.com, run by Square Enix's subsidiary Eidos, and Deusex.com, a promotional site for the forthcoming game, Deus Ex: Human Revolution.

    Scammer's dream

    Graham Cluley, a consultant at security firm Sophos, warned that both leaks could cause problems for the individuals concerned.

    "With the e-mail there is a danger that gamers could be e-mailed by someone pretending to be from the company who gets them to click on a link or run some malicious software," he told BBC News.

    "The resumes are a blueprint for identity theft. They have everything that scammers want. The only thing missing is credit card information."

    Mr Cluley pointed out that there was also the potential for huge embarrassment as it was unlikely those who had applied for jobs would want their current employers to know.
    Square Enix said there was no evidence that the information had been distributed.

    It also emphasised that the company does not hold customers' credit card data on its web servers.

    Mr Chippy

    Shortly after the attack, both websites displayed the message "Owned by Chippy1337", as well as several other known hacker names, including Xero, XiX and Venuism.

    However, it appears that some or all of those names may have been misappropriated by the real attackes.

    Tomb Raider maker Eidos owned one of the hacked sites. The company is owned by Square Enix

    Logs of Internet Relay Chat (IRC) conversations have appeared on the online, which appear to show the perpetrators discussing the hack as they carried it out.

    In one section, the individuals taking part wrote: "We put it in the name of chippy1337 and write the names ryan, dfs, xero, nikon, xix, venuism and evilhom3r.

    The same person then added the comment, "lol [laugh out loud]".

    Security in the video games industry has been in the spotlight in recent weeks after the hacking attacks on Sony's PlayStation Network and SOE online multiplayer system.

    The personal details of around 100 million users were stolen from the company's servers.
    Investigations into the source of the data breach are continuing, with specialist computer forensic teams and the FBI getting involved.

    The PlayStation Network remains offline, more than three weeks after the intrusion was discovered.
     
  2. HOPPER_34

    HOPPER_34 Senior Birdhound

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    Wow--bad times for the gaming industry. It could be another side effect of all of this...and one that you could almost see coming after what has happened to PSN. Unfortunately, once some people see what kind of chaos and publicity a thing like this creates, the more they want to do it themselves. Its sad to me to think that this is just part of what we have to deal with in the computer age. I used to go out and play football, ride bikes and build tree houses when I was younger...now some kids start on computers at age 5 and sit around on them all day and learn how to do things like this. I agree that it will eventually take more intensive law enforcement work and stiffer penalties to hopefully serve as a deterrent.
     
  3. ZeroRyoko

    ZeroRyoko Bad Sailor Girl

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    Yes, it seems to be getting worse and worse with each passing day. Hopefully whoever is responsible will be caught.
     
  4. Smack

    Smack The Realm Of AnarchY

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    Seems like everyday company's are getting hacked now, wonder if all the hackers got together and planned all this..
     
  5. Mika40

    Mika40 Active Member

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    This is truly not good at all what next group of hackers will pop up? We need Hackerware get smart industry hire the people to protect your business stop being cheap Sony, Microsoft and other's should be hiring like crazy!
     
  6. ted2112

    ted2112 Keyblade Master

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    I hope all of this will ultimately make on-line security better.
     
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