YES because your personal dislike of their franchises certainly means that their users deserve to have their info stolen and lose all their (sometimes hundreds) of registered games on it.Souplex said:Hopefully they actually do something to Valve instead of getting their info just to prove they can.Grey Walker said:Well I guess this means Steam'll be next on their list, they've hit all the console devs.
Valve needs to be taken down several pegs, then have sharp pegs driven through them.
Thank you, mine's not there. Quoting this so more people see it.whiteshark12 said:didn't see this posted, so:
http://lulzsecurity.com/releases/62000_random_logins.txt
Go on there, CTRL+F, search your e-mail. if it turns up, change your password. if it doesn't, your account details were not announced.
I dunno, man. Anonymous aren't the untouchable internet supervillain they're made out to be. I doubt they prove any threat to Lulzec at all. I know /v/ are pissed off at them, but there's nothing they can do.Virtual-Goose said:Anonymous should hack lulzsec or something not sure how but they should
Ex-Anon, huh? That would make sense. I can imagine some Anons would let the idea of power get into their heads and decide, "Why not screw around with some companies I don't like? And the people using their services."Jeffrey Rodriguez said:http://lulzsecexposed.blogspot.com/
It might be for the best if you do that anyway, just in case.redmarine said:Well, is Games for Windows account and XBox Live accounts the same? If so, I might as well change my password.
This is doubly unfunny to those who have both a PS3 and an XBox 360.UnmotivatedSlacker said:I almost find this funny since many x-box users were laughing when it happened to sony. Not too funny now, is it?