Hackers in Team Ireland

January 17th, 2007

I mentioned in my last post that very few people these days take the time to give their views on how things are shaping up in the world of online gaming. In the days of Geocities and Gibworld, the internet was hopping in time with its myriad of animated ‘mail me’ gifs. Dozens of clan sites and tinet homepages in Ireland were poised to strike at the slightest bit of news in the gaming scene. When the boat rocked, ripples would spread giddily through the network of fluorescent static HTML pages, lovingly tended by faithful enthusiasts.

Last week, the boat rocked. When I say it rocked, I mean it crashed into an iceberg and flipped over three times before landing upside-down in the Bermuda triangle. The thundering mother of all cheating scandals emerged in a haze of furious drama. eSReality has an account of the saga involving a English gamer called Fusen and netCoders.be - a group who make aimbots, wallhacks, etc., for games such as Quake 3, Enemy Territory, CoD 2, and SOF, and sell them for up to $200. This is story of the hacker who hacked the hackers and gained access to their database via a vBulletin exploit, exposing the details of all of their customers to the public. The wild-west response, where netCoders offer a $1,000 reward for information on their attacker. The irony of the moral high ground held by the victims and their alleged legal follow-up. The hackers’ threats to hack the hacker who hacked the hackers.

The plot thickened and boiled and simmered as professional players were busted, and respected Clanbase admins ruined. But it didn’t interest me until I noticed that several members of team Ireland were caught with aimbots and wallhacks.

I have followed Ireland in the Enemy Territory nations cups a few times, and despite our small playerbase, Ireland has always had a very strong squad which was able to compete at the highest level. More recently, a new generation of players has risen to eradicate the respect that Irish national teams have accumulated over the years. If this had happened 5 years ago, there would be riots.

6 Responses to “Hackers in Team Ireland”

  1. Michael Flanagan Says:

    Heh. I played a fair bit of Quake2 online and with clans (Clan Jedi and then Dark Knights, if you remember them) ‘back in the day’.

    It’s a shame this stuff should happen. Truly gone are the glory days.

    feckin’ n00bs tbh ;P

  2. The Slippery Orange Ballcock Says:

    And by riots you of course mean a small number of nerds typing furiously!

  3. James Says:

    I never played much Quake2 but I do know of Clan Jedi by reputation… who else was in it? I think Rev Hellfire put up an Irish Quake 2 server a couple of weeks ago for the sake of nostalgia. Don’t know if its being used.

  4. Michael Flanagan Says:

    hmm.. so long ago, I can hardly remember what *I* called myself back then ;-)

    I think ‘ObiWan’ (or some spelling variation of the same) was head honcho in Jedi. And the name Maximillion has just popped into my head.

    Ah, good times :)

  5. Darren Says:

    name names James, or least point me in the direction of said names…

  6. James Says:

    Slippery Orange Ballcock - never underestimate the power of a furious nerd’s typing.

    Darren - it was the new batch of players that I never knew… most of the details are on crossfire.nu

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I am from Cork, Ireland. A fan of the Big Lebowski, Mac OS X, Linux, Cork hurling, Munster rugby, Irish football. Interests include QuakeWorld, Python (lately Django), network security, web applications and technology in general.

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