• @mindbleach
    link
    English
    10310 months ago

    After that, he was relocated to a hotel (due to being doxxed) where all he had to work with was a Fire TV stick, which he promptly then used to hack Rockstar.

    Fuckin’ bravo. I mean, don’t do that, but on a purely technical level - nice.

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        English
        3010 months ago

        Well, between getting doxxed and annihilating any chance he had at getting a lenient sentencing, the more sensible decision would have probably been to sit on his hands and bide time for a couple months lol.

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        English
        1310 months ago

        He didn’t just steal content. He then tried to blackmail the company to not release the content he stole.

        Also, while you might be able to justify piracy of a released product in various ways (the common argument is that the would be pirate wouldn’t have paid for the product anyway and digital goods don’t have any cost to the developer from pirating them). But when the product hasn’t been released yet, then it has a much bigger cost because the pirated copy is the only option available and thus it can eat into actual sales. The inability to go through with their planned launch (something big publishers will spend millions hyping) and the release of an unfinished product can absolutely have financial damages. It’s hard to recover from a bad launch.

        And that’s without getting into the fact that hackers like this don’t usually stop at just leaking video games or the likes. They’ll also often steal people’s personal information. It’s a lot easier to see the moral issues when it’s your information being stolen.

      • @mindbleach
        link
        English
        910 months ago

        There’s no ethical use of ransomware.