I wanted to personally make you aware of the current issues we are experiencing and what we are doing to resolve the situation. For over a year now, we have been the target of numerous DDoS attacks against our game. Techniques vary, but essentially a DDoS attack involves overwhelming the online service with malicious traffic. This is - unfortunately - a growing plague within the industry that many online services struggle with, and RuneScape appears to be one of the biggest targets. Motives for launching these attacks seem to vary, but the end result is the same.
The sharp increase in attacks does tie closely with removal of private servers, bots and gold farming, so it would follow that this is in revenge for destroying their businesses. This has also resulted in an increase in immature users at malicious forums like 'bug'd abuse'd' DDoSing and stealing from many individual players, taking credit for RuneScape service outages. I wanted to take this opportunity to assure you that we have, are and will continue to work tirelessly, preventing as many of these attacks from affecting your gameplay as we can.
We have recently made a multi-million pound investment in our global IT infrastructure to deal with the continued attacks and are working with a number of service and security providers to eradicate the issue completely. You must register to post or download hacks.
Remember Me? Runescape Help. Results 1 to 15 of Just No. Originally Posted by FileCorrupt. Up to 10 years in prison. Good luck with that. Cant and wont and will never and under no circumstance could ever be made. And yes DDoS attacks will land you in prison for 16 years. So, there are manny DDoSers out there ex.
Dark DDoSer. Mudd plead guilty to a charge of 'committing unauthorized acts with intent to impair the operation of computers,' a charge of 'making, supplying, or offering to supply an article for use in an offense contrary to the Computer Misuse Act,' and a charge of of concealing criminal property.
Mudd admitted to carrying out some of the attacks himself, including ones against his college. According to the arguments in the case, selling access to Titanium Stresser was never about the money for Mudd. It was about status in the online community. The Guardian reports that Mudd's lawyer, Ben Cooper, argued that he had been "'lost in an alternate reality' after withdrawing from school because of bullying" and knew what he had done was wrong, but lacked empathy for his victims.
Mudd has autism, and his lawyer argued that he had been "seeking friendships and status within the gaming community.
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