Hack America's Army (the game); Get Taken Out. Literally

McFly

Member
Phil DeLuca, Executive Producer of America's Army posted on the official forums warning hackers to stay away from the US Army's online war game:

By the way, there's something to consider in that statement that gets missed time and again: we took notice. By we, I mean the entire AA team. That includes Public Applications, Government Applications, Ignited Minds, everyone associated with the development of the project - and the United States Army.

That last fact should give some of the bad guys pause, and yet it hasn't. Some of you (and clearly the bad guys are among them) don't always remember that this game, and all accounts and derivative products, are the property of the United States Army. When you tamper with the game, not only are you breaking the EULA you're misusing Army property - and, worse, you're misusing US Army computer programs and equipment.

Tampering with software and servers owned or used by the Army is cyber crime.

In the early 1940's, Japan learned an important lesson - "let the sleeping giant lie." We may not react swiftly, but when we do it's with unstoppable force. The Army has partners that deal with cyber crime as a matter of course. These include not just various Army IT departments, but also the Department of Justice, the Secret Service, and the Federal Bureau of Investigations.

It's going to get uncomfortable for some of the bad guys, but you know what? They brought it on themselves. Knowing this anyone who continues to be bad is just plain foolish. Keep trying, though. Sooner or later the bad guy will realize we've known about him for a while... and by then it's too late.

Allow me to speak directly to the bad guys for a moment: When you get banned, know that we know and have records showing you were doing something that's a violation of terms of service, breaks your EULA, and also happens to be against the law. We know who you are, and can track down where you play from. We have incontrovertible proof you did something illegal. The Army is angry, and we're coming for you.

http://ve3d.ign.com/articles/579/579289p1.html

Now I'm scared. :lol

Fredi
 
In the early 1940's, Japan learned an important lesson - "let the sleeping giant lie." We may not react swiftly, but when we do it's with unstoppable force. The Army has partners that deal with cyber crime as a matter of course. These include not just various Army IT departments, but also the Department of Justice, the Secret Service, and the Federal Bureau of Investigations.

Damn and here I was hoping for a big update announcement starting with how "We beat Japan in WW2 now we're going to beat them in gaming 2005!" but I guess not! It's so much easier to kill hackers than to actually make a good game! :lol
 
Have you guys here played America's Army? This summer, it was like a three month addiction for me...All I did every night was play that map Pipeline, from like 10 until 3 in the morning. Had a lot of good times with it.
 
ToyMachine228 said:
Have you guys here played America's Army? This summer, it was like a three month addiction for me...All I did every night was play that map Pipeline, from like 10 until 3 in the morning. Had a lot of good times with it.
i downloaded it, but decided not to install it. i'd like to keep my entertainment and the goverment as separate as possible. That's kinda hard to do with a game that sends information directly to goverment servers.
 
Yusaku said:
I imagine if they followed up on their thread it would be a very bad PR move for the Army.

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YOU WALLHACKED IN AMERICA'S ARMY? HOPE YOU LIKE COCK UP YOUR ASS WHILE YELLING FOR THE GUARDS AND YOUR MOMMA, SON
 
Funny.. :D

Btw, the game isn’t very good anyways, controlling the player in the game feels like running around with an elephant. Slow, stiff and inaccurate. :P
 
Forsete said:
Funny.. :D

Btw, the game isn’t very good anyways, controlling the player in the game feels like running around with an elephant. Slow, stiff and inaccurate. :P

Add in constant heavy breathing and some whining, and you've got what your average gamer really would be like in the Army. :lol
 
I didn't like the idea of having to go through training missions just to try the game out. So I wasted 3 hours to decide I didn't like it, when it should have been 1 hour.


I like how people assign all these mystical "powers" to our government. ("OMG they are spying on you!") When decades of previous experiences has proven that most government agencies are inept, slow and do not function.
 
In my limited experiences, the majority of FPS hackers are younger adults/kids. If you think the government is going to waste his time going after a 17-19 yr old with the handle "OWNZURFACE", then you are being paranoid.

File this under: Empty internet legal threat.

Now if they could find the programmer who made the hack and distributed it ... then they might have a case.
 
ToxicAdam said:
In my limited experiences, the majority of FPS hackers are younger adults/kids. If you think the government is going to waste his time going after a 17-19 yr old with the handle "OWNZURFACE", then you are being paranoid.

File this under: Empty internet legal threat.

Now if they could find the programmer who made the hack and distributed it ... then they might have a case.
Are they going to start raiding these "hackers'" homes and fining them or tossing them in prison? No. Are they going to continue tracking offenders and add this to additional information to maintain a database of potential threats? Yes.
 
tedtropy said:
Add in constant heavy breathing and some whining, and you've got what your average gamer really would be like in the Army. :lol


BTW, I love your avatar. Yummmm, Diane Mizota, where's my spoon. :)
 
I imagine if they followed up on their threat it would be a very bad PR move for the Army.

Are you talking about the same group torturing people, running around being blown up, not having armor, paying employees shit, and hated the world? Like they give a fuck at this point about publicity.
 
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