Codemasters got breached

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Epitome

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Jul 17, 2009
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Just got an email from the folk over at Codemasters, it reads

Dear valued Codemasters customer,

On Friday 3rd June, unauthorised entry was gained to our Codemasters.com website. As soon as the intrusion was detected, we immediately took codemasters.com and associated web services offline in order to prevent any further intrusion.

During the days since the attack we have conducted a thorough investigation in order to ascertain the extent and scope of the breach and have regrettably discovered that the intruder was able to gain access to the following:

Codemasters.com website

Access to the Codemasters corporate website and sub-domains.

DiRT 3 VIP code redemption page

Access to the DiRT 3 VIP code redemption page.

The Codemasters EStore

We believe the following have been compromised: Customer names and addresses, email addresses, telephone numbers, encrypted passwords and order history. Please note that no personal payment information was stored with Codemasters as we use external payment providers, meaning your payment details were not at risk from this intrusion.

Codemasters CodeM database

Members' names, usernames, screen names, email addresses, date of birth, encrypted passwords, newsletter preferences, any biographies entered by users, details of last site activity, IP addresses and Xbox Live Gamertags are all believed to have been compromised.

Whilst we do not have confirmation that any of this data was actually downloaded onto an external device, we have to assume that, as access was gained, all of these details were compromised and/or stolen.

The Codemasters.com website will remain offline for the foreseeable future with all Codemasters.com traffic re-directed to the Codemasters Facebook page instead. A new website will launch later in the year.

Advice

For your security, in the first instance we advise you to change any passwords you have associated with other Codemasters accounts. If you use the same login information for other sites, you should change that information too. Furthermore, be extra cautious of potential scams, via email, phone, or post that ask you for personal or sensitive information. Please note that Codemasters will never ask you for any payment data such as credit card numbers or bank account details, nor will Codemasters ask you for passwords or other personal identifying data. Be aware too of fraudulent emails that may outwardly appear to be from Codemasters with links inviting you to visit websites. The safest way to visit your favourite websites is always by typing in the address manually into the address bar of your browser.

Unfortunately, Codemasters is the latest victim in on-going targeted attacks against numerous game companies. We assure you that we are doing everything within our legal means to track down the perpetrators and take action to the full extent of the law.

We apologise for this incident and regret any inconvenience caused.

We are contacting all customers who may have been affected directly.

Should you have any concerns or wish to speak to a member of our Customer Services team, please email them at custservice@codemasters.com.


Just a heads up for those of you Codemasters acc's

For discussion:

Who is worse here, the hackers or companies that are still clearly not taking adequate measures to protect the data we entrust to them :/ Im more pissed at Codemasters here.
 

Alucard788

New member
May 1, 2011
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So...your more pissed at the company, who might have not been able to prevent something like this in the first place, and not the people that currently have your personal information?

See this is what it's going to keep happening. There is no 100% security people...it's time to get mad at the hackers.
 

Rkiver

High King of Tara
Mar 30, 2010
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Just got it a few moments ago myself.

At this point I'd say it's a little of both. We have companies clearly not bothering with security, despite being warned about it. And yes there will always be someone wanting to access something they shouldn't.

I think it'd be nice if companies that are compromised, and it's found out it was something they could have easily fixed, should get fined, heavily. If it's a case of it was an unknown flaw and they had already taken precauations as much as possible, no fine.
 

Kopikatsu

New member
May 27, 2010
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Codemasters CodeM database
Members' names, usernames, screen names, email addresses, date of birth, encrypted passwords, newsletter preferences, any biographies entered by users, details of last site activity, IP addresses and Xbox Live Gamertags are all believed to have been compromised.
Ha! Silly Microsoft.

Anyway, someone mentioned that the reason CodeMasters was hacked was because of a project they were involved in that started with the letter 'M'. Anyone know what that is?
 

Akihiko

Raincoat Killer
Aug 21, 2008
952
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Yeah. I just got that email too.

I wish someone would lock up all the hackers and burn them. I'm just sick of it now.
 

Lionsfan

I miss my old avatar
Jan 29, 2010
2,842
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Wow, what's with the increasing number of public and successful attacks?

Oh and blame is both on parties. Probably about 15% is on Codemasters (for not having better security), and 85% on the Hackers (for hacking obviously).
 

Epitome

New member
Jul 17, 2009
703
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Alucard788 said:
So...your more pissed at the company, who might have not been able to prevent something like this in the first place, and not the people that currently have your personal information?

See this is what it's going to keep happening. There is no 100% security people...it's time to get mad at the hackers.
Im pissed at such a total breach, they are happy to point out they are the latest in a string of companies to be attacked, and if I recall they were attacked only a fortnight or so before this aswell. They should have been much better prepared. Security breaches are unavoidable, total breaches like these are definately preventable.
 

Alucard788

New member
May 1, 2011
307
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Epitome said:
Alucard788 said:
So...your more pissed at the company, who might have not been able to prevent something like this in the first place, and not the people that currently have your personal information?

See this is what it's going to keep happening. There is no 100% security people...it's time to get mad at the hackers.
Im pissed at such a total breach, they are happy to point out they are the latest in a string of companies to be attacked, and if I recall they were attacked only a fortnight or so before this aswell. They should have been much better prepared. Security breaches are unavoidable, total breaches like these are definately preventable.
How do you know that? If someone really wants to get in and mess things up they will find a way.

Just remember that there are strangers now that have your personal info....not the company...and you have no idea what they are going to do with that info.

Also get ready for some folks to say that you, in some way, deserved it. All because you signed up with them in the first place.

No it is time to blame the hackers.