"There are a lot of people and fellow hackers who believe that DerpTrolling is just a bunch of kids. He was keen to stress that DerpTrolling means business. "We have around 2 million Comcast accounts, 620,000 Twitter accounts, 1.2 million credentials belonging to the CIA domain, 200,000 Windows Live accounts, 3 million Facebook, 1.7 million EA origins accounts, etc." In all of our raids we have a total of around 7 million usernames and passwords," he said. "We have 800,000 from 2K and 500,000 credit card data. And, although the leak isn't large in the grand scheme of things, the DerpTrolling member said that the group has much more data that it didn't leak. The group hopes that, by leaking the customer credentials, it will force companies to upgrade their servers to prevent DDoS and data hacks, resulting in better customer service. Like I said, DerpTrolling in no way wants to harm our children by leaking such damaging data. "A show of force from us, would be an attack on 2K that would be very similar to our attacks on Blizzard. "We were advised by one of our friends over at RedHack to make adjustments in our operations," the DerpTrolling member said - but noted that the move was not a show of force. The move runs contrary to the group's previous assertions that it did not want to leak customer data - but the group has decided to change its tactics after finding that its efforts were not being taken seriously. Inside are usernames and passwords for 2,131 PSN users 1,473 Windows Live users and 2,000 2K Games users. "Dear Internet," the Pastebin document reads, "The following is a very small portion of Lord Gaben and the rest of his crew's glorious raids across the high seas of the Internet." DerpTrolling, the hacker group that claimed responsibility for a DDoS attack on Blizzard's servers over the weekend, has released a log of customer logins across the PlayStation Network, 2K Games and Windows Live.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |