

“For now, we continue to believe that it does not contain any data that would compromise player privacy and we have no reason to believe that it is a material risk to our games, our business or our players.” “We are aware of the latest posts from the alleged hackers and analyze the published files,” said an EA spokesman. The gaming publisher confirmed this in a new statement Motherboard. The website also says it viewed a copy of a 1.3 GB compressed file the hackers released that contains “references to EA internal tools and the company’s Origin store.” If EA doesn’t start paying, the company has threatened to reveal even more stolen data. “We sent ransom emails a few weeks ago to EA but we don’t get a response so we will publish the src Kotaku”Says one of the hackers’ forum posts, Motherboard reported. according to a new report from Motherboard. Now the hackers seem to be throwing parts online to pressure EA to cash them out. Last month, hacker confidential information stolen of FIFA and Battlefield 2042 Electronic Arts publisher, including source code for Frostbite’s proprietary game development engine.
