| 
				 Semi-Off Topic, but read ^_^ 
 Federal agents have seized 10 computers and other computer gear from the home of a Snoqualmie teen suspected of hacking into Sony's
 extremely popular online game "EverQuest."
 
 
 The hacking would have given him access to personal information on
 hundreds of thousands of players and Sony employees.
 
 
 Agents also say the hacker, who was 17 at the time, was able to access
 the home computer of the company's vice president of product
 development, Brad McQuaid, and downloaded documents for an
 as-yet-unreleased version of the popular role-playing fantasy game.
 
 
 Sony, which declined comment on the investigation, says the game is
 played by as many as 400,000 people worldwide and reaps more than $50
 million a year in revenue.
 No arrests have been made, and no charges have been filed, said
 Deborah Hartman, a spokeswoman for the U.S. Attorney's Office in San
 Diego, where Sony Online is based.
 
 
 A search warrant filed recently in U.S. District Court in Seattle
 shows that FBI computer-crime agents seized 10 computers and dozens of
 computer drives and disks from the home two weeks ago. Agents are also
 investigating a Mobile, Ala., man over the intrusions.
 
 
 The warrant says the U.S. Attorney's Office suspects the men of crimes
 that could put them in federal prison for up to five years.
 
 
 Last October, authorities say, the men broke into one of the 40
 servers Sony Online uses to operate the game and gained access to a
 powerful "superuser" account.
 
 
 
 
 Thats some krazy stuff
 
			
			
			
			
				  |