Tag Archive for: Players

Card sharks infect professional poker player’s laptop with a dirty RAT

F-Secure

If you think laptops used to move large sums of money are highly sensitive instruments, you’re right. Just consider the experience of Jens Kyllönen, a high-rolling professional poker player who is a fixture in both real-world tournaments and online card rooms.

In September, while participating in the European Poker Tour event in Barcelona, Kyllönen returned to his hotel room to find that his room key no longer unlocked his door. After finally gaining access, he discovered the Fujitsu Celsius laptop that he left inside was missing. When he returned later, the computer was mysteriously back in its place. The poker player, who had winnings in the range of $ 2.5 million in the past year, suspected something was amiss, so he asked researchers at F-Secure, a Finland-based antivirus provider, to take a look.

Sure enough, the forensic examination revealed that a RAT—short for a remote access trojan—had been installed on the machine during a time coinciding with its brief disappearance in Barcelona. The RAT was programmed to silently start each time the computer was turned on. Among other things, it gave the operator the ability to view the cards Kyllönen was holding when playing online hands of poker. Assuming the operator was sitting at the same virtual table, this unfair advantage would allow him to know when to hold or fold based on the cards Kyllönen had.

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Ars Technica » Technology Lab

Bug in EA’s Battlefield Play4Free allows attackers to hijack players’ PCs

A frame from a video demonstrating an attack that allows attackers to execute malicious code on older Windows systems that have Play4Free installed.

If you play EA’s popular Battlefield Play4Free game on an older version of Windows, a pair of researchers say they can hijack your system by luring you to a booby-trapped website.

The proof-of-concept exploit, demonstrated last week at the Black Hat security conference in Amsterdam, allows attackers to surreptitiously execute malicious code on default systems running Windows XP or Windows 2003 that have the Play4Free title installed. There are close to 1 million players of the first-person shooter game, and about 39 percent of Windows users are still on XP.

The webpage used in the exploit opens the game on a victim’s computer and instructs it to load a malicious “MOD” file used to customize game settings and features, according to a document the researchers published Friday. Using some nonstandard behavior of a programming interface version found only in older versions of Windows, the MOD file is able to upload a malicious batch file that will be executed the next time the computer is restarted. The technique is successful because it overrides a whitelist that’s supposed to restrict the sites that are permitted to load the Play4Free game.

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Ars Technica » Technology Lab

Griefers, not rapture, make thousands of World of Warcraft players drop dead

If you are a gamer, then you really don’t want to see your avatar fall over dead. This weekend, entire virtual cities with thousands of World of Warcraft players suddenly keeled over.
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Ms. Smith’s blog

‘Control-Alt-Hack’ Game Lets Players Try Their Hand at Computer Security – Product Design & Development

Tamara Denning and Yoshi Kohno in the UW’s Security and Privacy Research Lab play the game they created. Their game gives players a taste of what it’s like to be a computer security professional. Research assistant Thomas Winegarden, a UW undergraduate, is …
“computer security” – read more