Become a fan of Slashdot on Facebook

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Security

Hackers Steal Wealth of Data from Game Giant EA (vice.com) 39

Hackers have broken into gaming giant Electronic Arts, the publisher of Battlefield, FIFA, and The Sims, and stole a wealth of game source code and related internal tools, Motherboard reported Thursday. From the report: "You have full capability of exploiting on all EA services," the hackers claimed in various posts on underground hacking forums viewed by Motherboard. A source with access to the forums, some of which are locked from public view, provided Motherboard with screenshots of the messages. In those forum posts the hackers said they have taken the source code for FIFA 21, as well as code for its matchmaking server. The hackers also said they have obtained source code and tools for the Frostbite engine, which powers a number of EA games including Battlefield. Other stolen information includes proprietary EA frameworks and software development kits (SDKs), bundles of code that can make game development more streamlined. In all, the hackers say they have 780gb of data, and are advertising it for sale in various underground hacking forum posts viewed by Motherboard. EA confirmed to Motherboard that it had suffered a data breach and that the information listed by the hackers was the data that was stolen.
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Hackers Steal Wealth of Data from Game Giant EA

Comments Filter:
  • by suso ( 153703 ) * on Thursday June 10, 2021 @12:40PM (#61473884) Journal

    Another good reason not to run games that require you to run them as the superuser, because eventually their code may be compromised and exploits galore over the network. Currently, there are a handful of games that require you to run (not just install) them as the superuser.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    I can't use EA games from Gamepass on my PC because EADesktop.exe shows an error message, and can't be uninstalled, and can't be re-installed.

    It's just permanently broken.

    EA is the fucking ruiner of games.

  • One that just covers hackers and security breaches? It's getting tedious hearing about the increasing level of crime in cyberspace.

    • by gweihir ( 88907 )

      Since I work in that area, my degree and experience are getting worth more with every such story. Hence no tedium here ;-)
      I do understand your stance though.

      • The media coverage makes it feel like we're not making any headway. For what it's worth most of my team have gone through training for threat modeling, it mostly focused on STRIDE. I'm not saying we all came out as security experts, but it is a pretty big deal to at least have all developers exposed to the idea of security and have some practical knowledge. The big change was when we formulized security as part of our product life cycle planning.

        • by gweihir ( 88907 )

          I agree. Significant headway is being made in many places. There are just quite a few companies where the "leadership" is asleep at the wheel. Of customers I audit, two got hit recently. For both I did a "ransomware readiness" IT audit question last year, both came out as "reasonably prepared" and both were up again from backups in 2 days with the attack vector fixed and nothing paid to the criminals. That is pretty good IMO. Sure, it would be better if the attackers did not even get in, but unless MS and s

    • Yes, with none of the current editors whose choices are lazy, scattershot, and frequently avoid parent links in preference for "normie" entertainment sources.

      It should be called (something)dot in memory of a once great site run into the ground out of sloth and blatant passive-aggressive malice.

  • Can even keep your own shit safe, why would I trust with mine.
    TPB4EVAR
  • by stolidobserver ( 4112531 ) on Thursday June 10, 2021 @12:50PM (#61473928)
    The hackers have stated that EA can buy back half of the code with one initial lump sum payment and the rest will come in 15 equal installments of 2/3 the price of the initial lump sum for each installment.
    • by nagora ( 177841 )

      The hackers have stated that EA can buy back half of the code with one initial lump sum payment and the rest will come in 15 equal installments of 2/3 the price of the initial lump sum for each installment.

      Or what?

      Are they under some delusion that the code is worth anything to anyone other than EA, who still have a copy?

      • by gweihir ( 88907 )

        Or what?

        Are they under some delusion that the code is worth anything to anyone other than EA, who still have a copy?

        Probably. The in actual reality the only worth the code would have is to embarrass EA if (and only if) it is exceptionally obviously shoddily written. No other value. Learning things from it probably takes longer than doing it from other sources. Using it comes with an exceptionally high risk of having that use detected and getting sued into the ground. Nobody smart will touch that code.

        • by znrt ( 2424692 )

          Using it comes with an exceptionally high risk of having that use detected and getting sued into the ground. Nobody smart will touch that code.

          not necessarily. but more likely that those are portions of the inhouse toolchain and engine which will be of very little or impractical use to anyone without insider knowledge or using the same environments/processes. unless there is some bizarre valuable secret buried, you would be far better off by using any commercial engine and tools or even rolling your own than trying to unravel that particular spaghetti mess and figuring out how to use it, not to mention managing it at the support level.

          the only rel

        • Worst case for EA, the code could contain proof that EA were stealing code or resources from someone else. I wouldn't put it past them.

      • To have this EA standard business procedure joke explained to you will cost $15.

  • Learning from it takes too much effort compared to other ways. Copying it may well get you sued into the ground. Nobody smart will touch this poisoned offering.

    • But...but...slashdot tells me information wants to be free?

      • by vadim_t ( 324782 )

        Not sure what your point is. One thing doesn't conflict with the other.

        "Information wants to be free" just means "information tends to naturally spread, and you need to exert effort to restrict it". Which has nothing to do with legal issues.

        So, as "per information wants to be free", it's out there and it's unlikely anybody will be able to stuff that genie back into the bottle.

        And as per "it's illegal", companies won't touch this with a 10 foot pole.

        But it'll still spread all the same, among people who alrea

    • by jythie ( 914043 )
      Not to produce games no, but there might be actors interested in the bits that connect to their network or other player's computers.
  • A few weeks ago, there was a story about an employee selling the most powerful items in FIFA 21 [polygon.com]. I do not play FIFA but my understanding is that certain cards in the game are the most powerful. Normally they have a very low chance to spawn with the only ways to increase chance by 1) playing more matches (which grants more chests) or 2) outright purchasing more chests with micro-transactions. A developer was able to create them and then disguise the acquisition as legitimately obtained.
    • That story - and maybe EA management - makes an assumption that an employee was generating the items. Now that this story is out, it is less clear if it was an actual employee or a hacker generating the items.
  • So can a rogue hacker group now fix the bugs in Mass Effect Andromeda?
  • My former employers had a data breach some years ago. The network people noted unusually high data transfer between our main server and the outside world. A couple of months later counterfeit copies of our hardware started appearing. The software that goes with it is written in an idiosyncratic style that takes some getting used to, so good luck doing anything with it. :-)

    Since the company imploded not long afterwards nothing was ever done about it. Nothing to do with the data breach, a change in the mark

  • Microsoft Windows strikes again ..
  • the hackers said they have taken the source code for FIFA 21

    So essentially they have the source code for FIFA 2020, FIFA, 2019, and FIFA 2018 as well.

  • by wakeboarder ( 2695839 ) on Thursday June 10, 2021 @03:03PM (#61474444)

    I hope they got the source and creator files for Sid Meiers Alpha Centarui and I hope that someone takes it and upscales it. That would be sweet.

  • by thegarbz ( 1787294 ) on Thursday June 10, 2021 @03:57PM (#61474632)

    FIFA 2022 will be FIFA2021 with a slightly changed colour tone, a new logo, and every time you kick the ball $1 gets deducted from your bank account.

  • I don't think I've bought a game from them since the 1980s. They had some hot titles in the 1980s.

  • and maybe port Frostbite to more platforms, release games on Linux, take a different approach to anti-cheating.

UNIX was not designed to stop you from doing stupid things, because that would also stop you from doing clever things. -- Doug Gwyn

Working...