The report comes from Cyber Daily, who also broke the news of last year’s confirmed hack attack on Insomniac Games. The site claims that new ransomware group Mogilevich are the culprits, as per the screencap of a darkweb posting above, and that the hackers are now trying to get Epic or another party to pay up for the return of the data, with a deadline of 4th March.

Epic, however, say that they’ve yet to see any proof that a ransomware attack has taken place. “We are investigating but there is currently zero evidence that these claims are legitimate,” a spokesperson told Eurogamer this morning.

  • @moody
    link
    English
    659 months ago

    Situations like this are why I never save my payment information anywhere.

    • @TheIllustrativeMan@lemmy.world
      link
      fedilink
      English
      8
      edit-2
      9 months ago

      I use a CC, so I really don’t give a shit if someone steals my number.

      Last time my card got skimmed it was $0 and <30 seconds to fix, including hold time. They don’t fuck around when you’re reporting stolen info, because legally it’s their money, not yours.

    • @Whirlybird@aussie.zone
      link
      fedilink
      English
      1
      edit-2
      9 months ago

      Eh, credit card details being stolen is basically inconsequential these days. Usually your bank will catch any illegal uses and stop them, and if they don’t all it takes is a single call and it’ll be taken care of.

      In cases like this though, it’s pretty much never your actual credit card details, but a token. That token is used by the store to charge your card, but it’s 100% useless to anyone else. Epic likely never even see your credit card details, they’d just go directly to the payment merchant who then give epic a token.