Multiplayer eSports network ESEA was found to have malware in its anti-cheat client, which used users' graphics cards to mine for Bitcoins. Information about the exploit was posted to the ESEA's forums by user "ENJOY ESEA SHEEP", who found he had been unwittingly farming Bitcoins for someone in the community after noticing excessively high idle GPU usage. Mining is the legitimate, and deliberately system-intensive process of adding transaction records to Bitcoin's public ledger – generating Bitcoins for the miner in the process. The ESEA client had been pooling the GPUs of users in order to generate more money for wallets held by ESEA staff. ESEA co-founder Eric 'lpkane' Thunberg responded to the accusation, initially claiming it was a mistakenly released April Fool's joke. His first statement is kind of amazing: "Lol that got aggressive quickly. "Back towards the end of march, as BTC was skyrocketing, Jaguar and I were talking about how cool it would be if we could use massive amounts of GPUs logged into the client to mine. "We went back and forth about it, considered doing something for April fools, didn't get it done in time, and eventually elected to put some test code in the client and try it on a few admin accounts, ours included. "We ran the test for a few days on our accounts, decided it wasn't worth the potential drama, and pulled the plug, or so we thought. "Fast forward to 48 hours ago, a fuck up in the client server results in a restart which results in a setting getting changed which enables it for all idle users, and here we are." Thunberg claimed the combined efforts of ESEA users' unaware mining netted them roughly 2BTC, or $280, which he promised would be put towards the Season 14 prize pot. He returned with a second statement a few hours later, after users pointed out that anti-viruses had been flagging the client for longer than the claimed 48 hours. He admits the mining had been part of the client since 14th April, and that the overall money mined totaled $3,602.21, before going to say: "So first the bad news, this is way more shady than I originally thought, and as the person who is ultimately responsible for everything it's 100% my fault. "Now the good news, as of the client update released in the last hour, all the BTC stuff is out which should solve the GPU and AV warnings." Thunberg once again promised to use the now substantially higher total as part of the Season 14 prize pot, and that – as recompense for the additional strain that's been placed on user's GPUs – would gift a free one month Premium code for Premium account holders. He finished by saying, "once again, our bad, thanks for keeping us honest." The post ESEA accidentally release malware into public client, causing users to farm Bitcoins appeared first on PC Gamer. | |||
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miercuri, 1 mai 2013
ESEA accidentally release malware into public client, causing users to farm Bitcoins g21
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