Quantcast
Channel: StudioSysAdmins Message Board
Viewing all articles
Browse latest Browse all 3749

Major incident: Sony Hacked

$
0
0
Major incident: Sony Hacked
posted by Michael Stein on Dec. 3, 2014, 11:45 a.m.
I downloaded the data so that I could see if those morons let my personal information out into the digiverse forever. I'd love to see them come after me for data theft -- is it stealing if it was yours to begin with?

Stein

On Wed, Dec 3, 2014 at 3:30 PM, Saker Klippsten <sakerk@gmail.com> wrote:
Oh there is more coming. 40gb for the press this past weekend. Claiming they have 100TB worth of data.


On Dec 3, 2014, at 7:27 AM, Jean-Francois Panisset <panisset@gmail.com> wrote:

A 27GB "file o SPE stuff" torrented from EC2 instances owned by PlayStation network, so either that's been p0wned as well or some kind of honeypot?

JF


On Mon, Dec 1, 2014 at 2:36 PM, Shawn Wallbridge <swallbridge@gmail.com> wrote:
The news the other night said it could be North Korea in retaliation for "The Interview".

I got a chuckle out of that.

shawn

On Mon, Dec 1, 2014 at 6:36 AM, Rob LaRose <rlarose@rockpaperscissors.com> wrote:

My Cyber Monday moneys on a massive coverup by someone who *really* wanted the free Annie award screener, but took the do not distribute warnings dead-seriously. What better way to smokescreen for the tiniest violation than the complete pwning of a multi-billion dollar media conglomerate?

Rob

rob larose
| engineer | rock paper scissors |212-255-6446|www.rockpaperscissors.com

On Nov 30, 2014, at 9:52 PM, Joseph Boswell <joeboswell@gmail.com> wrote:

I doubt, very, VERY much that it would be an employee. No matter how disgruntled, everyone pretty much knows who comes knocking when breaches happen... If the executive team came over to my place and took turns urinating on my dog for hours I still wouldn't do it, nor would I jeopardize the jobs and paychecks of said coworkers.

Someone would have to be both insanely disgruntled and incredibly stupid (judging by the thoroughness of the attack) to do this.

I guess what I am saying is: 20$ that it's not internal.

J


On Sun, Nov 30, 2014 at 9:33 AM, <content@studiosysadmins.com> wrote:

A very disgruntled employee or employees master-minded this attack.



To unsubscribe from the list send a blank e-mail to mailto:studiosysadmins-discuss-request@studiosysadmins.com?subject=unsubscribe


To unsubscribe from the list send a blank e-mail to mailto:studiosysadmins-discuss-request@studiosysadmins.com?subject=unsubscribe


To unsubscribe from the list send a blank e-mail to mailto:studiosysadmins-discuss-request@studiosysadmins.com?subject=unsubscribe

To unsubscribe from the list send a blank e-mail to mailto:studiosysadmins-discuss-request@studiosysadmins.com?subject=unsubscribe

To unsubscribe from the list send a blank e-mail to mailto:studiosysadmins-discuss-request@studiosysadmins.com?subject=unsubscribe

Thread Tags:
  discuss-at-studiosysadmins 

0 Responses   0 Plus One's   0 Comments  
 
I downloaded the data so that I could see if those morons let my personal information out into the digiverse forever. I'd love to see them come after me for data theft -- is it stealing if it was yours to begin with?

Stein

On Wed, Dec 3, 2014 at 3:30 PM, Saker Klippsten <sakerk@gmail.com> wrote:
Oh there is more coming. 40gb for the press this past weekend. Claiming they have 100TB worth of data.


On Dec 3, 2014, at 7:27 AM, Jean-Francois Panisset <panisset@gmail.com> wrote:

A 27GB "file o SPE stuff" torrented from EC2 instances owned by PlayStation network, so either that's been p0wned as well or some kind of honeypot?

JF


On Mon, Dec 1, 2014 at 2:36 PM, Shawn Wallbridge <swallbridge@gmail.com> wrote:
The news the other night said it could be North Korea in retaliation for "The Interview".

I got a chuckle out of that.

shawn

On Mon, Dec 1, 2014 at 6:36 AM, Rob LaRose <rlarose@rockpaperscissors.com> wrote:

My Cyber Monday moneys on a massive coverup by someone who *really* wanted the free Annie award screener, but took the do not distribute warnings dead-seriously. What better way to smokescreen for the tiniest violation than the complete pwning of a multi-billion dollar media conglomerate?

Rob

rob larose
| engineer | rock paper scissors |212-255-6446|www.rockpaperscissors.com

On Nov 30, 2014, at 9:52 PM, Joseph Boswell <joeboswell@gmail.com> wrote:

I doubt, very, VERY much that it would be an employee. No matter how disgruntled, everyone pretty much knows who comes knocking when breaches happen... If the executive team came over to my place and took turns urinating on my dog for hours I still wouldn't do it, nor would I jeopardize the jobs and paychecks of said coworkers.

Someone would have to be both insanely disgruntled and incredibly stupid (judging by the thoroughness of the attack) to do this.

I guess what I am saying is: 20$ that it's not internal.

J


On Sun, Nov 30, 2014 at 9:33 AM, <content@studiosysadmins.com> wrote:

A very disgruntled employee or employees master-minded this attack.



To unsubscribe from the list send a blank e-mail to mailto:studiosysadmins-discuss-request@studiosysadmins.com?subject=unsubscribe


To unsubscribe from the list send a blank e-mail to mailto:studiosysadmins-discuss-request@studiosysadmins.com?subject=unsubscribe


To unsubscribe from the list send a blank e-mail to mailto:studiosysadmins-discuss-request@studiosysadmins.com?subject=unsubscribe

To unsubscribe from the list send a blank e-mail to mailto:studiosysadmins-discuss-request@studiosysadmins.com?subject=unsubscribe

To unsubscribe from the list send a blank e-mail to mailto:studiosysadmins-discuss-request@studiosysadmins.com?subject=unsubscribe


Viewing all articles
Browse latest Browse all 3749

Trending Articles