You need a javascript enabled browser to watch videos.
Click To Unmute
GS News Update: Hackers Sold Counterfeit Xbox One After Infiltrating Microsoft
GameSpot's Top 10 Games of 2023
Thompson: The Pop Culture Icon’s Strange Legacy - LoadoutFirearms Expert’s FAVORITE Weapons Of 2023State Of Gaming Handhelds In 2023How Lies of P Cracked the Souls GenreLike a Dragon: Infinite Wealth - Official Ichiban Kasuga Character Spotlight TrailerLike a Dragon: Infinite Wealth - Official Saeko Mukoda Character Spotlight TrailerLike a Dragon: Infinite Wealth - Official Chitose Fujinomiya Character Spotlight TrailerLike a Dragon: Infinite Wealth - Official Eric Tomizawa Character Spotlight TrailerLike a Dragon: Infinite Wealth - Official Kazuma Kiryu Character Spotlight TrailerLike a Dragon: Infinite Wealth - Official Koichi Adachi Character Spotlight TrailerLike a Dragon: Infinite Wealth - Official Yu Nanba Character Spotlight Trailer
Share
LinkEmbed
Size:640 × 360480 × 270
Start at: End at: Autoplay Loop
Want us to remember this setting for all your devices?
Sign up or Sign in now!
Please use a html5 video capable browser to watch videos.
This video has an invalid file format.
00:00:00
HTML5
Auto HD High Low
Report a problem
Sorry, but you can't access this content!
By clicking 'enter', you agree to GameSpot's
Terms of Use and Privacy Policy
enter
Two hackers have pleaded guilty, and another two have been charged, of participating in an elaborate international scheme to build a counterfeit Xbox One from data stolen online.
David Pokora, 22, of Ontario, Canada, and Sanadodeh Nesheiwat, 28, of Washington, New Jersey have admitted to being involved in a hacker ring which dates back to January 2011.
During that month, the group infiltrated the internal network of Epic Games and stole code for the then-unreleased game Gears of War 3. Then, in September 2011, some of the team illegally accessed Valve's internal network and stole a beta build of Activision's Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 3.
Another two defendants (Nathan Leroux, 20, of Maryland and Austin Alcala, 18, of Indiana) have not pleaded guilty but are charged of acting in the conspiracy.
Assembly instructions, software designs, and source code for the next-gen system were found and stolen, which Leroux then used to build a counterfeit version of the system.
That console was then sold onto another unnamed person, who at the time was based in Mahe, Republic of Seychelles. The system was eventually sold on eBay, reportedly for about $20,100.
Then, in September 2013, just a few weeks ahead of the Xbox One launch, two unnamed individuals used Microsoft employee data to break into the company's Redmond campus to steal three beta versions of the Xbox One. The hackers are accused of providing the data to the burglars.
The cost of damages associated with the hacking ring is believed to total more than $100 million in intellectual property and data.
According to an indictment, published on Scribd and unearthed by Kotaku, the team's thefts extended to a whole range of confidential and lucrative software.
Assistant Attorney General Leslie R. Caldwell, of the Justice Department’s Criminal Division, said "the American economy is driven by innovation. But American innovation is only valuable when it can be protected. Today's guilty pleas show that we will protect America's intellectual property from hackers, whether they hack from here or from abroad."
He added: "As the indictment charges, the members of this international hacking ring stole trade secret data used in high-tech American products, ranging from software that trains U.S. soldiers to fly Apache helicopters to Xbox games that entertain millions around the world."
The full indictment can be found below.
Federal Indictment Against Alleged Game Company Hackers