CD Projekt Red Hit With A Cyberattack

Is it just me or are cyberattacks becoming common lately? The video game developer who created The Witcher game series, as well as Cyberpunk 2077, has “become a victim of a targeted cyberattack” just recently.

In a message the developer shared on Twitter Tuesday morning, the hackers allege that they stole the closely guarded source code for Cyberpunk 2077, Gwent, and The Witcher 3 (including an unreleased prototype of the last). Documents "relating to accounting, administration, legal, HR, investors relations and more" were also allegedly compromised.

CD Projekt Red assures people, however, that “to the best of our knowledge, the compromised systems did not contain any personal data of our players or users of our services.” The company also stands firm that they “will not give in to the demands nor negotiate with the actor, being aware that this may eventually lead to the release of the compromised data.”

CAPCOM and Nintendo have also been victims of cyberattacks in the previous year.

What are your thoughts about this one?

(Image Credit: CD Projekt Red/ Ars Technica)


Comments (1)

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All it's doing is minimizing its surface area. Even non-living things can do that (think of a droplet of oil immersed in water).

They do bring up the point that people refer to "intelligent materials", but I think the study does more to show the ridiculousness of that label rather than the actual intelligence of the slime mold. "Smart materials" or "responsive materials" would perhaps be better.
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Plants can re-orient themselves to get more sunlight too, but I wouldn't call that intelligence. Putting the slime mold in a maze seems misleading.
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Silliness.
If a plant is placed in the same maze, with nutrients at one end, it would be intelligent? Its roots would fill out the same maze, and in the end, the root that finds the nutrients would grow the strongest. Same result.

Am I missing something?
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It didn't solve the maze, it just expanded to every possible pathway. If it had gone straight from one end to the other, that would've been intelligence, possibly.
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All it did was pull back the parts of it that weren't most connected to the nutrient sources, to which it was apparently connected at the start and end of maze. Now, if it had grown from one end to the end to get the nutrients, that'd be impressive.
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I agree with commenters. Also, did it 'pull back' from non-nutrient paths, or did the cells in that chain just die off from not being fed?

In any case, it's just doing it's thing, growing toward a food source. If you consider that intelligent, then we must consider a whole bunch of things 'intelligent', like DNA and virii, various internal organs, all types of plants and stuff.

Putting something in a maze is a poor test for this kind of thing, i think. Why do so many 'scientists' think maze=smart? bah!

-
Scientist
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Slime molds are freaking awesome. I had one in my back yard about a year ago and it was just fascinating. If I would have encountered one of those in my experiment-on-everything-you-can-find-in-the-back-yard preteen years, I would have had days of fun with that thing. If you haven't already, look up slime molds on wikipedia.
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Slime molds are fascinating. I had one in my back yard about a year ago. I had to throw it out because I was afraid the dogs would eat it, but if I found one as a kid I would have had days of fun experimenting with it.
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