Do you think they would damage their stock, panic shareholders and falsify police reports in order to delay a patch?That would certainly beinconvenient for CDPR management, now wouldn't it?
Do you think they would damage their stock, panic shareholders and falsify police reports in order to delay a patch?That would certainly beinconvenient for CDPR management, now wouldn't it?
Do you think they would damage their stock, panic shareholders and falsify police reports in order to delay a patch?
Do you think they would damage their stock, panic shareholders and falsify police reports in order to delay a patch?
this is only very bad if they found something on those servers that was very bad for CD. If they are the company they claim they are, they don't have much to worry about other than a security issue which can be resolved.
Not entirely. It would depend on where the vulnerability was and if/how much customer data was acquired. If it has anything to do with Cyberpunk, unlikely, and all of their customer's information has been compromised; then this goes from Mass Effect Andromeda to Anthemx10. In that case; Anthem could brick your console, Cyberpunk could brick your life.
Dear Forum Members!
I have a question.
My gog account is linked with Twitch.
If I change my gog password, what happens with my linked Twich?
Thank you for your answer.
Are you serious? Comments like these and on twitter are why this game should be for Adults only. Maybe they should have stuck with different rating, less sales sure but at least the demographic would be more mature. This is terrible no matter what your thoughts on the company or the game launch. It's illegal and every gamer should be outraged and condemn this.Also, I'd give myself the benefit of doubt. The message left honestly seems too childish, I don't think that an hacker capable of breaching a big company internal system would be interested on leaving any trace, especially without telling exactly what the agreement is.
I wouldn't be surprised if this was actually an "inside job", CDPR victimizing itself to recover some sort of players support.
But who knows, right?
However, If I was an honest and transparent company I would have nothing to fear.
Customers will be able to find out how the company actually treats them, whether CDPR actually knew about the state of the game before release, what was eventually cut from the game, when the game turned from an rpg into an action-adventure, and so on.From customers point of view, nothing was gained here.
Didn't I wrote about pointless speculation?Customers will be able to find out how the company actually treats them, whether CDPR actually knew about the state of the game before release, what was eventually cut from the game, when the game turned from an rpg into an action-adventure, and so on.
How are you comparing the military in this scenario? That's far off, these are developers that mind you most likely had to transition to remote working due to the pandemic. There are a number of vulnerabilities that could have arisen over the past year for several companies not just CDPR. It happens, hopefully the individuals responsible are caught.No
If you have something that is eyes only, top secret, sensitive, etc. you NEVER EVER PUT THEM ON THE CLOUD!!
You put them on local computers, not connected to the internet, and only people with proper authorization can have anything to do with them. If they are on any network, they will be internal network with zero physical link to the internet.
In fact in the machining business, if you are machining something that has a NDA attached to it, you do NOT use Fusion 360 to generate toolpaths. Because Fusion 360 is a cloud only software, meaning everything you do on it is on the cloud, as the software is meant for collaborative work, so what you make is shared so others may be able to improve on it. Kinda like open source software. Making parts using Fusion 360 is enough to violate any NDA.
I don't care how secure some cloud provider is, they are on the open internet, it WILL get hacked. So if it's important information that will damage you if it gets out, then it stays on paper, on closed network, or on no network, and strict access control for who sees them or has access to them.
The military doesn't put stuff on clouds, neither should anyone if they have private info that they don't want out there.
At the very least the data should only be on closed network accessible only via specialized VPN.
I'm 61 years old and I've played games my entire life. I can tell you that the release of CP 2077 WAS the worst release at least in my lifetime. None of the other games that have been mentioned come anywhere near close to this hot mess.Not sure if cdpr deserved this, cause EA or other companies have done a lot worse. unless it was internally done...
I'm 61 years old and I've played games my entire life. I can tell you that the release of CP 2077 WAS the worst release at least in my lifetime. None of the other games that have been mentioned come anywhere near close to this hot mess.
Funny. I couldn't play the Wasteland 3 at all for 2-3 weeks because certain place in game, not only caused game to crash but corrupted saves.I'm 61 years old and I've played games my entire life. I can tell you that the release of CP 2077 WAS the worst release at least in my lifetime. None of the other games that have been mentioned come anywhere near close to this hot mess.
How are you comparing the military in this scenario? That's far off, these are developers that mind you most likely had to transition to remote working due to the pandemic. There are a number of vulnerabilities that could have arisen over the past year for several companies not just CDPR. It happens, hopefully the individuals responsible are caught.
Mmmm, I don't know about that. Perhaps you feel that way, I don't, but the facts don't play with this take well. Fallout76 and Anthem seemed to be, as the people who didn't buy in figured, contentless cash grabs rushed out the door. Cyberpunk has content, it has story, it has mechanics, it has a realized world, it has intriguing characters, etc. All of these things are broken in their own way, but they are there, and the gun play ain't terrible.
No, I'm not saying that at all. What I'm saying is based on what CDPR stated via written and video explanations is that they were aware of the state of the entire game prior to it being released. This means the state of the game for all platforms. They chose to release it anyway. That's so wrong on so many levels. You can't see this? I play on Xbox One X and it was unplayable at launch and for the next how ever many weeks it was until patch 1.11 released. After that I was able to finish the main campaign. The key is that they were aware of the hot mess but decided to go forward with the release anyway, criminal IMO.Funny. I couldn't play the Wasteland 3 at all for 2-3 weeks because certain place in game, not only caused game to crash but corrupted saves.
Cyberpunk 2077 I started playing on day 1 and finished with 1.06. Didn't need to take breaks to finish the game to wait for patches, they patches improved my experience.
But that's not the topic here. In topic I'm not sure I get you. So are you saying that illegal hacking somehow improves the situation for us end users?