![]() However, this wasn’t a strictly virtuous act - the perpetrator changed passwords for two accounts, sold items and updated two-factor settings once it became clear an attempt to claim a bug bounty (for a non-existent flaw) wasn’t going to work. As evidence, they provided photos showing details of a handful of players, including high-profile examples. ![]() This was done solely to “prove a point,” the hacker claimed. The intruder could see email addresses, change passwords, strip two-factor authentication and even ban users. An anonymous attacker talking to Motherboard has revealed that they bribed a Roblox customer support representative to get access to the customer support panel for the online game platform. ![]() Hackers don’t necessarily need to break into networks to compromise game companies - sometimes, it’s just about coercing the right people.
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