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james_white

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james_white
·2 lata temu·discuss
There's a little bit of history here with the hacker Destroyer2009. He's been terrorizing Apex public ranked lobbies since at least December 2023. He's done the usual cheats of aimbot, walling, rage hacking, flying around, speed hacking, etc. He's done all this without being successfully banned via the anticheat as well as circumventing manual bans from the dev team. He's also been able to gift thousands of dollars worth of Apex packs to streamers in addition to spawning in dozens of bots in-game that chase and try to kill their target[1].

It's also important to note that the 2 players targeted in yesterday's games are both multiple LAN champions from rival teams so the likelihood that they themselves were cheating is quite low. Per another streamer targeted via the Apex packs, Mande, claims to have had a conversation with the cheater and was able to glean that the cheater was motivated via "fun" or attention. It'd likely stand to reason that the 2 players were victims of a phishing attack rather than an RCE in Apex/EAC. If it's an RCE, why waste such a big bad powerful vulnerability on just 2 players and not target as many as you can if the motive really is "for the lulz"? There'd sure be a lot more lulz to be had if the hacker targeted as many people as he could. Using Occam's Razer without context, it's again likely phishing. Destroyer2009 does seem to have some sort of server-side access given the gifted Apex packs and ability to spawn in and control bots in-game. It'll be interesting to see what Respawn/EA have to say about this incident though we'll likely never get the full technical picture.

As an aside, if the first player targeted, Genburten, never had the in-game chat show up and the second attack on ImperialHal never happened, Genburten's gaming career would've been in the gutter. How would he prove an isolated one-off attack on his PC that remotely installed cheats and turned them on?

Interesting discussion from Thor at PirateSoftware[2]

[1]: https://youtu.be/7e3mia4b-_Q?t=192 [2]: https://www.twitch.tv/videos/2094227670?t=8h41m6s
james_white
·5 lat temu·discuss
Angrave was very memorable for me for CS241 Systems Programming (2016?). To this day my threading understanding is unparalleled to that of my colleagues due to him and that class.
james_white
·6 lat temu·discuss
Couldn't recommend Jeff Erickson's lecture notes more for algorithms, DP, and the like. I too did rather poorly in the class so you're not alone! In a similar vein, Lawrence Angrave, a systems programming lecturer, has a wonderful crowd-sourced "book" [1] on all things systems programming. It is my go to resource for brushing up on these topics. Lastly, David Forsyth, a statistics/applied ML lecturer has a gold mine of a book for diving into ML and difficult concepts that come with it [2]. [1] https://github.com/angrave/SystemProgramming/wiki [2] http://luthuli.cs.uiuc.edu/~daf/courses/AML-18/learning-book...