"We would like to inform you of a recent incident affecting the security of certain data hosted by one of our service providers.
What happened?
At the end of September, we were the victim of a social engineering attack targeting one of our employees. This highly sophisticated attack began on the Discord platform with the downloading of malware under cover of a game on the Steam platform, proposed by an acquaintance of our employee, himself a victim of the same attack.
Our security team took immediate action. Despite our actions, the attacker was able to exploit one of the stolen cookies to connect to the management interface of one of our SaaS providers. Thanks to this cookie, now deactivated, the attacker was able to extract, via our SaaS provider's API, certain private information about you.
The information concerned is your first and last name, e-mail address, date of birth, billing address and credit card expiry date. It is important to note that no passwords or sensitive banking data have been compromised.
What actions have we taken?
As soon as this incident was discovered, we took immediate steps to secure our systems and took all necessary precautions to avoid future incidents. We have also reinforced the security protocols we apply with all our SaaS providers. Finally, we will be upgrading our internal systems to render compromised workstations harmless.
What can you do?
In the wake of this incident, please be very vigilant about the emails you receive, as they could be phishing attempts. In general, for all your accounts, we advise you to protect yourself by setting up multi- factor authentication ("MFA").
To set up MFA on your Shadow account, please refer to the following
I've literally had these "hacks" before. They get into one of your friend's accounts and message you asking to alpha test a game they made. It's so blatantly fake though it's embarrassing anyone can get caught by it.
Sometimes it's super obviously fake, but if you actually sent alpha test games to your friends semi regularly or it was something not unusual like Gary from accounting "can you sign off on this invoice?" It's a lot more understandable.
All it takes is a day when Gary hasn't had a great night of sleep, had an argument with his wife that morning, and he's stressed trying to get an annual report to his boss by COB, and BOOM, Gary clicks the 'obvious' link trying to know out some low hanging fruit and it's game over.
Kind of like Nvidia GeForce Now - except that you get a full windows PC environment to play in, so theoretically you can play any game that runs on Windows.
I used it for a while, it's pretty good, but the cost has risen a lot faster than the Hardware quality lately and now in order to have a "top spec" gaming pc it's like $50/month.
Not a bad deal if you don't game much, but want to check out a specific game for a month or two - or if you travel a lot but want the power of a full desktop. But if you just want a gaming PC, you're probably better off building your own
Considering how much a 'top spec' PC costs (even to build DIY), let's take a lowball figure of $2000. 2000 / 50 = 40. So 40 months, or 3.3 year of $50 a month is the equivalent of a gaming PC.
I tend to upgrade every 3-4 years. Even at $50 a month this isn't necessarily bad value for money (imo). And especially for people who can't DIY faced with the cost of a custom-build machine.
A cool french company that sell you access to a full pc in the cloud. It was bought by the same guy who own ovh last year.
Sad to see this leak, I have a few friends that use it, it's probably the best cloud gaming plateform.
i mean, you could just google, but here's what i remember:
your own gaming PC in the Cloud, long before cloud streaming was cool and Mainstream
it's also much better since it's a whole PC (more like what Microsoft is Planning for the Future) and you can do whatever you like with it. As long as it's legal, of course.
It’s not exactly that hard to crack passwords from a hash anymore. I don’t know if shadow has MFA but you should assume that if all you have is a password that your account is already compromised.
Honestly, props to them for disclosing this so early. Other companies have waited months to tell their customers about these things, sometimes only because it leaked.
Their VMs are often used for cloud gaming. Your own version of GeForce now essentially.
The attacker might have told the employee to check if it works or something of the sort.