[QUOTE="Nekkronaut"][QUOTE="dvader654"] Hide yo kids, hide yo wife, ****'s about to go down! [QUOTE="dvader654"] I am sure Sony doesn't want all this attention but the more attention there is the more chance of getting the hackers.dvader654You think? Or is it simply a way to just make people aware of a problem they'll never notice otherwise and then playfully pat their shoulder saying softly ''It's ok, we got this''? What's people knowing gonna change anyway? It's Sony's buisness anyways, the only thing you need to do is to accept whatever compensation they give you for your trouble, or refuse it/no offer and if that's the case sue them. Big deal, anyways you'll probably end up getting rewarded for your patience. +5 Gov rep. 0 Work done. It has nothing to do with Sony. A crime was committed, there should be an investigation and hopefully an arrest. You understand that your info might have leaked due to their lack of proper security. You understand that by company standards they dun ****in' goofed. This is not about them, it's about you and that if you feel unsatisfied with the current situation that they should compensate you by other means.
Nekkronaut's forum posts
Don't worry everyone, Fox News is on top of this now.dvader654Hide yo kids, hide yo wife, ****'s about to go down!
I am sure Sony doesn't want all this attention but the more attention there is the more chance of getting the hackers.dvader654You think? Or is it simply a way to just make people aware of a problem they'll never notice otherwise and then playfully pat their shoulder saying softly ''It's ok, we got this''? What's people knowing gonna change anyway? It's Sony's buisness anyways, the only thing you need to do is to accept whatever compensation they give you for your trouble, or refuse it/no offer and if that's the case sue them. Big deal, anyways you'll probably end up getting rewarded for your patience. +5 Gov rep. 0 Work done.
Whoever did this got 7 proxies that disagree. Someone will get blamed, and will pay, that's for sure. It's rarely the work of a single individual though. **** lawsuits.[QUOTE="Nekkronaut"][QUOTE="S0lidSnake"]
Whoever did this is f***ed. There will be a massive investigation, and they WILL catch him.
Pixel-Pirate
Proxies are not magical shields. If a person has the time, motivation, and money they can find you through any amount of proxies. They just rarely have the motivation to spend thousands tracking you down....unless, you know, you steal 70 million credit cards.
The problem in this case is the hacker(s) probably took adventage of ToR or a similar program which lets you ip jump from one country to another with a single click. In order to file a lawsuit, you need to have proof. Sure it's easy to incriminate an individual or 2, but actually providing proof is another complicated step especially if whoever did this knew they were stealing 70 million credit cards, they probably would have covered their steps accordingly. Bottom line, no proof, no culprit. And have fun getting a search warrant if whoever did this gets identified by some miracle.[QUOTE="Legendaryscmt"]
[QUOTE="rragnaar"] From what I've heard, it was something called ReBug that is likely behind all of this, and not GeoHot or Anonymous. Then again, that could all be speculation.
S0lidSnake
Not pointing fingers, but it would be interesting if it was found out that rebug was created or linked to the stuff that Geo posted online.
Whoever did this is f***ed. There will be a massive investigation, and they WILL catch him.
Whoever did this got 7 proxies that disagree. Someone will get blamed, and will pay, that's for sure. It's rarely the work of a single individual though. **** lawsuits.
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