Author Topic: Origin hack exploit  (Read 823 times)


oh thank god.
hopefully it didn't install the viruses with the update.. Did it? Because whenever I.. oh god.. I may have opened with the shortcut.. I don't know..

Okaayy, so I just happened to have misread, so it didn't install using the update, but it does it using the game launches, okay, good thing I use the SimCity shortcut to run it, funny though I was thinking of playing Battlefield 1942 using via Origin, but remembering how mad I got at the bots on Expert I didn't, so phew. I thought these were one of those viruses that stood in the background and took your data
« Last Edit: March 20, 2013, 03:45:43 PM by Decepticon »

-Generic complaining and whining about how EA sucks and how Origin is horrible-


What an odd choice of quotation.
« Last Edit: March 20, 2013, 03:46:38 PM by Tonkka² »


What an odd choice of quotation.
Half Life 2 confirmed for Origin 2035!!!

I find it strange how "Steam" and "VALVe" are mentioned in the tags and there is a stuffstorm going on in the comments.

and this, is why origin sucks.

Half Life 2 confirmed for Origin 2035!!!
don't you mean half-life 3

If you play battlefield, I believe that you can launch it using just a browser without launching it on origin

If you play battlefield, I believe that you can launch it using just a browser without launching it on origin
The only battlefield that is installed is 1942, and then I have Battlefield Premium which has been uninstalled for months.

i don't see how this is a "hack" or an "exploit"

don't you mean half-life 3
Breen's assumed to be dead and his voice actor is dead, obviously not Half Life 3 >:c

Breen's assumed to be dead and his voice actor is dead, obviously not Half Life 3 >:c
And i highly doubt they will turn him into a Stephen Hawking's good looking brother.

i don't see how this is a "hack" or an "exploit"

http://www.capsulecomputers.com.au/2013/03/origin-users-at-risk-from-origin-store-hack/

Quote
Origin users are at risk from a fairly simple hack used in the Origin store. What is basically done is that when the player opens a game, a hacker can replace some code so that the player actually opens a malicious link.

Well i played BF3 just a few or two hours ago and nothing special happened.

Pfft, Nexon was using links like that years ago. They started making you have to run MapleStory through their website using links in a similar way, I believe. But back then my computer was utter stuff, couldn't run more than two things at once. So starting up my browser, then waiting for it to load, then running the game, then closing the browser correctly, was a massive pain in the ass. So I used this legitimate method to use a launcher instead of sending me to the website.

Point being... People have known these can be unsecure for years, probably. It mentions Steam had a problem last year with it. Why the hell do people still use these systems without closing loopholes in it? It's bad practice altogether, anyway. I could only imagine opening through a website is meant to have the browser tell them what the person is so they can ban people more easily, which is likely easy to bypass at this point with browsers/browser-mods designed for hackers.