I love battle field heroes, I am glad I was a cheap ass and didn't buy anything now.
It pays to not pay!
Wow might be next, someone warn them now, they might do one last lulz...
If you played it your username and password are in the list, after googling it appears to be unsalted MD5 hashes - which supposedly is pretty insecure.
If you played it your username and password are in the list, after googling it appears to be unsalted MD5 hashes - which supposedly is pretty insecure.
Makes me question the security.
There's a thousand other groups to replace lulzsec, so there's no point in antagonizing them like usama. Even if they were taken down, security would still be shitty.
"US-CERT says MD5 "should be considered cryptographically broken and unsuitable for further use,"[9] and most U.S. government applications now require the SHA-2 family of hash functions."
so, after this are they going to actually use a secure method for encrypting passwords, or just store them in a proverbial shoe box under the bed?
It looks like the AT&T RAR file contains a trojan. Thankfully I only opened the Battlefield Heroes database and my computer is locked down rather tight.
according to Lul the pass should be look like this
Jun 02 17:17:11 neuron pass: 93ght98hq308h5QA$^%Q#$^A#%UYA%YQ
Jun 02 17:17:18 neuron kl0ps: your elite also because your part of us
Jun 02 17:17:23 neuron joepie91: 9k followers on twitter
Jun 02 17:17:33 kl0ps thank
Replies
It pays to not pay!
Wow might be next, someone warn them now, they might do one last lulz...
http://icy-bee.co.uk/2.csv
If you played it your username and password are in the list, after googling it appears to be unsalted MD5 hashes - which supposedly is pretty insecure.
Probably just safe to change your password/passwords if you used the same password on other forums or anything of the sort.
Makes me question the security.
There's a thousand other groups to replace lulzsec, so there's no point in antagonizing them like usama. Even if they were taken down, security would still be shitty.
so, after this are they going to actually use a secure method for encrypting passwords, or just store them in a proverbial shoe box under the bed?
http://activepolitic.com:82/Outside_News/6057.html
It looks like the AT&T RAR file contains a trojan. Thankfully I only opened the Battlefield Heroes database and my computer is locked down rather tight.
It figures.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/technology/2011/jun/24/lulzsec-irc-leak-the-full-record
ooooo