#4044829 - 12/03/14 12:31 PM
Sony Cyber Attack
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Chris2525
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In case you didn't hear, Sony Pictures was hacked and copies of several movies including Fury and Annie were leaked. http://www.cbc.ca /news/arts/fbi-warns-of-hacking-threat-after-sony-pictures-attack-1.2857435 This is what I don't understand: Why the hell do people expose sensitive material to the internet? If you don't want something to get leaked, why would you EVER plug an internet cable into the machine that material resides in? What, they think "it's ok, we have cyber-security measures in place! We'll be fine!"?. Don't people understand that that's just a challenge to hackers? What on earth is so difficult about the concept of standalone machines, local networks that aren't connected to the internet, and transmission via physical storage devices? This is what we do in the Department of National Defense. If you don't want something leaked, you NEVER put it on a machine that's connected to the internet, EVER. There's no such thing as "safe" on an internet connected machine. While theft of this sort is wrong, I really don't have much sympathy for Sony. Exposing sensitive material to the internet (i.e. placing it on machines or networks that ate connected to the internet) is like leaving your car unlocked overnight overnight in the worst neighborhood in town.
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#4044853 - 12/03/14 01:31 PM
Re: Sony Cyber Attack
[Re: Chris2525]
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Joined: Jan 2001
Posts: 20,152
Top Gun
Lifer
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Lifer
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Roch-Vegas NH
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Did you hear who they think this is? North Korea, because of the movie with Seth Rogen & James Franco called the Interview where they get an interview with Kim Jung-un and the CIA asks them to kill him.
Reports last night say this hack has NK fingerprints all over it.
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#4044857 - 12/03/14 01:34 PM
Re: Sony Cyber Attack
[Re: Chris2525]
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Chris2525
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And if that's true, it should be even more embarrassing for Sony. Way to go, you were bested a guy in North Korea.
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#4044858 - 12/03/14 01:35 PM
Re: Sony Cyber Attack
[Re: Chris2525]
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the soupdragon
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This is what I don't understand: Why the hell do people expose sensitive material to the internet? If you don't want something to get leaked, why would you EVER plug an internet cable into the machine that material resides in? What, they think "it's ok, we have cyber-security measures in place! We'll be fine!"?. Don't people understand that that's just a challenge to hackers? What on earth is so difficult about the concept of standalone machines, local networks that aren't connected to the internet, and transmission via physical storage devices? This is what we do in the Department of National Defense. If you don't want something leaked, you NEVER put it on a machine that's connected to the internet, EVER. There's no such thing as "safe" on an internet connected machine.
Maybe it was the Cylons. Looks like BSG got it right then SD
From the hills rebounding Let this war cry sounding Summon all at Cambria's call The mighty force surrounding
Men of Harlech onto glory This shall ever be your story Keep these fighting words before ye Welshmen never yield
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#4044861 - 12/03/14 01:46 PM
Re: Sony Cyber Attack
[Re: Chris2525]
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Chris2525
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Re: North Korea. I think we have our suspect - the one guy in North Korea who knows how to use a computer: [video:youtube] http://youtu.be/IrCQh1usdzE?t=15m42s[/video]
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#4044871 - 12/03/14 02:11 PM
Re: Sony Cyber Attack
[Re: Chris2525]
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Raw Kryptonite
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Viral advertising IMO. Fury has already been out, and you're either taking the kids to see Annie or you aren't, regardless. Not much damage done, if it even happened. Any proof these are actually out there anyway? Odd the "offending movie" itself wasn't included as hacked and released, which would have made more sense for revenge. No customer info leaked, like with PlayStation accounts, so people don't feel threatened.... I have my doubts.
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#4044873 - 12/03/14 02:17 PM
Re: Sony Cyber Attack
[Re: JimK]
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And they say the leaked files have been downloaded over a Million times. And they might possibly contain Malware that could take over your computer. Convenient. LOL
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#4044886 - 12/03/14 02:35 PM
Re: Sony Cyber Attack
[Re: Chris2525]
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MarkG
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The Bayou
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What on earth is so difficult about the concept of standalone machines, local networks that aren't connected to the internet, and transmission via physical storage devices? Some people have real difficulty with this concept, to them an online connection is as vital for a PC to function as electricity. I had this conversation not long ago regarding my home network (two desktops and a laptop), someone told me using Win98/2000/XP was unsafe even though it's offline. My network isn't even wireless, it's completely local and still I hear, "You think you're safe but if someone wants to break in, they'll find a way". Yeah, if they physically break into my house maybe.
The rusty wire that holds the cork that keeps the anger in Gives way and suddenly it’s day again The sun is in the east Even though the day is done Two suns in the sunset, hmph Could be the human race is run
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#4044888 - 12/03/14 02:37 PM
Re: Sony Cyber Attack
[Re: Top Gun]
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PanzerMeyer
Pro-Consul of Florida
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Pro-Consul of Florida
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Miami, FL USA
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Fury is already out of our movie theater which I'm shocked about. Yet Gone Girl is still playing. War movies as a general rule are a tough sell at the box office. Murder/Crime thrillers usually do MUCH better by comparison. It's just tough to attract both the female and the under 30 crowd to war films.
“Whoever fights monsters should see to it that in the process he does not become a monster. And if you gaze long enough into an abyss, the abyss will gaze back into you.”
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#4044902 - 12/03/14 03:00 PM
Re: Sony Cyber Attack
[Re: Chris2525]
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Cold_Flying
6079 Smith
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Sony hacked only a few years after they infected hundreds of thousands of PCs with the rootkit DRM they had on their Sony music CDs - that they didn't tell people about and that left peoples' computers vulnerable to hackers.... http://www.securityfocus.com/news/11369What's that about laughing loudest and laughing last?
Question everything!
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#4044925 - 12/03/14 04:08 PM
Re: Sony Cyber Attack
[Re: Chris2525]
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Reports say that this was a Sony Pictures group breach, not all of Sony, and some suggestions that it was an inside job from a disgruntled employee.
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#4045051 - 12/03/14 09:03 PM
Re: Sony Cyber Attack
[Re: Raw Kryptonite]
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Chris2525
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Viral advertising IMO. Fury has already been out, and you're either taking the kids to see Annie or you aren't, regardless. Not much damage done, if it even happened. Any proof these are actually out there anyway? Odd the "offending movie" itself wasn't included as hacked and released, which would have made more sense for revenge. No customer info leaked, like with PlayStation accounts, so people don't feel threatened.... I have my doubts. Yes, there's proof. Putlocker was running a bad camcorder version of Fury just a few days ago. Now they've got a DVD quality screener up. See for yourself if you don't mind visiting Putlocker (virus and popup warning). Likewise, you can see the DVD version popping up on Piratebay a few days ago. Same goes for Annie. Unreleased DVD versions of both movies appeared on piracy sites on the 28th, so it's real. As for not much damage done, are you kidding me? Do you know how much money Sony stands to lose by having movies they planned to rent and sell being released to the public for free? You realize that selling and renting movies is one of the ways that movie studios make money, right? DVDs, electronic sell-through and subscription video-on-demand (like netflix) is an $18 billion a year industry. There's a reason why movies arne't just distributed for free by their owners. And the fact that they didn't release "The Interview" could be due to any number of reasons. Maybe the computer(s) successfully hacked didn't happen to contain that particular movie. Or if the theory that North Korea is behind this is true, their motive was to suppress that movie. How would flooding the internet with free copies of a movie they're trying to suppress make any sense?
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#4045057 - 12/03/14 09:20 PM
Re: Sony Cyber Attack
[Re: Chris2525]
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Raw Kryptonite
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People that pirate movies pirate movies, they don't bother buying or renting. Those movies would eventually be up there anyway. The average movie goer and renter has no idea who Piratebay is, much less Putlucker (whom I've never heard of either). Still odd to me "they" would get Fury and Annie, and NOT the movie that supposedly started all of this. Maybe I'm wrong, time will tell. Perhaps. Until then: Viral. Advertising.
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#4045077 - 12/03/14 10:10 PM
Re: Sony Cyber Attack
[Re: Raw Kryptonite]
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Chris2525
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People that pirate movies pirate movies, they don't bother buying or renting. I do both. Now I won't be renting Fury when it comes out because I already saw it for free. Once again, there's a reason why film studios don't just upload their movies to YouTube once they're out of theaters. Do you not understand why that is? Those movies would eventually be up there anyway. The average movie goer and renter has no idea who Piratebay is, much less Putlucker (whom I've never heard of either). Enough people use pirated movies to warrant the film industry investing millions of dollars in fighting piracy. Still odd to me "they" would get Fury and Annie, and NOT the movie that supposedly started all of this. I already explained this. Just because hackers were able to steal those two movies doesn't mean they had access to all Sony movies. You see to be under the assumption that these hacker broke into some central vault where all the movies are stored. In reality, they probably broke into a bunch of Sony employees' workstations and laptops. Viral advertizing? Why would someone advertize for a movie by offering if for free? Please explain how Sony benefits by releasing "pirated" version of their own movie.
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#4045086 - 12/03/14 10:42 PM
Re: Sony Cyber Attack
[Re: Chris2525]
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Master
meh
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meh
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It's not a victimless crime! Or so the ads say!
Really though arguments can be made both ways. While some pirates may only want to watch a movie once and then never again (and then the owner losses a sale/ticket) most are not that way. If they like the movie a lot of people will buy it. (I am that way. If I watch something I like on netflix I will just buy it) and others steal just to steal or collect with no intention of ever watching or buying.
The owner wants to classify all pirates as the first (lost sale) and the pirates want to all classify themselves as the later (never had the intention of buying / only interested in watching for free ie no lost sale).
In truth it is normally mostly somewhere in between where piracy does equal some lost sales but it also produces some sales. I would imagine that if you threw out all the extremes piracy is closer to breaking even in sales leaning on the loss of sale side of the equation. It sure as **** is no where near what the owner would have you believe though.
There are just too many factors in the equations for it to be purely black and white. For instance in some countries people WOULD buy if the price was reasonable but import fees / taxes and refusal to sell the product for a reasonable rate compared to local income means pirating or buying pirated is the only option. Yet all of those sales are lumped into the same "loss of sale" category by owner.
Last edited by Master; 12/03/14 10:43 PM.
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#4045094 - 12/03/14 11:14 PM
Re: Sony Cyber Attack
[Re: Chris2525]
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Raw Kryptonite
Beat the Kobayashi Maru
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People that pirate movies pirate movies, they don't bother buying or renting. I do both. Now I won't be renting Fury when it comes out because I already saw it for free. Once again, there's a reason why film studios don't just upload their movies to YouTube once they're out of theaters. Do you not understand why that is? Those movies would eventually be up there anyway. The average movie goer and renter has no idea who Piratebay is, much less Putlucker (whom I've never heard of either). Enough people use pirated movies to warrant the film industry investing millions of dollars in fighting piracy. Still odd to me "they" would get Fury and Annie, and NOT the movie that supposedly started all of this. I already explained this. Just because hackers were able to steal those two movies doesn't mean they had access to all Sony movies. You see to be under the assumption that these hacker broke into some central vault where all the movies are stored. In reality, they probably broke into a bunch of Sony employees' workstations and laptops. Viral advertizing? Why would someone advertize for a movie by offering if for free? Please explain how Sony benefits by releasing "pirated" version of their own movie. If you're one of those that downloads pirated movies, I doubt they were holding their breath hoping you'd actually pay up the $2 to rent anything. That hurts Red Box, DirecTv and the like more than Sony though. The movie I'm referring to as the subject of viral advertising is "The Interview", which was not leaked, obviously. Fury has been out. Those that would go to see Annie probably wouldn't pirate it for their kids rather than go to the theater. But who knows, maybe there are cheapskates that would? They picked some safe movies to do this with, knowing they would end up pirated anyway. Might as well make the pirates work for them for a change and get something out of it. In fact, just because these movies are out there doesn't mean this is actually the source.
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#4045100 - 12/03/14 11:24 PM
Re: Sony Cyber Attack
[Re: Chris2525]
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Chris2525
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So you think it's all a big conspiracy? Again, I'll ask - to what end? What does Sony gain by giving away their movies for free?
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Exodus
by RedOneAlpha. 04/18/24 05:46 PM
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