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View Full Version : N3 Hack Sold to the Korean FTA Manufacturers?


Chameleon
01-20-2009, 01:28 PM
Found floating 'round the net...

fuck uz
h3R3Z W3 Goz @g@in G33

w3 lov3 to h@ck @ccount$ @nd w3 do it goodz

w3 h@ck3d jj m@ny tim3$ @nd d@nybo3 @nd gs2 nic3 pd @ccount th@nk$ for th3 db @bd 3m@il li$t$ @nd now nicky did u tink u c@n w@lk @w@y nicky @nd think w3 wouldnt h@cku 2
h3r3 i$ d@ n3w$ yo

hushmail
msn
yahoo
@ll yo g@ve up r3cords to di$h you on d3c 1

mik3y @nd nicky pl@ning to fuck ov3r st3vi3 @nd run with @ll th3 c@$h @ft3r s3lling 24x h@ck to kor3@. u fuck$ will b3 stop3d t@k3 dis w@rning now boys.

jj w@$ $pott3d in l@ @ f3w monthz t@ go and nowz in ont@rioz nic3 trip jj.


morz 2 cum


Translated:

we love to hack accounts and we do it goodz

we hacked jj many times and danyboe and gs2 nice pd account
thanks for the db abd email lists and now nicky did u tink
u can walk away nicky and think we wouldnt hacku 2
here is da news yo

hushmail
msn
yahoo
all yo gave up records to dish you on dec 1

mikey and nicky planing to fuck over stevie and run with
all the cash after selling 24x hack to korea. u fucks will
be stoped take dis warning now boys.

jj was spotted in la a few monthz ta go and nowz in ontarioz nice trip jj.

morz 2 cum

sheeda2007
01-20-2009, 02:46 PM
I dont get those guys....

No Nagra3 or anything related to that. All i see is grade -7 english with lots of hack and BS....

stonemason1
01-20-2009, 03:26 PM
really looks legit . dont most puters have spell check?

cesareo
01-20-2009, 08:20 PM
yea i think just kidding and thatīs all.

madwolf
01-20-2009, 08:43 PM
dont look to serious

cam08
01-21-2009, 10:06 AM
Stick it to da man:fuck:

Fallen Angel
01-21-2009, 03:33 PM
Not too fond of JJ......He did alot of damage in the past...I hope what they are saying is true...
If it is, it'll be more tv in a few months...


FA

hummer
01-21-2009, 07:07 PM
Underground Pirates......Blog date; 1-14-09

DTV has been "HACKED" for some years, and has been known and reported on only a few "underground" sites, it has not been commonly known in the FTA world of site's because the clear fact was "money" openly posting this information would be worthless to people with this information, but for the underground community it was "gold".

So just remember anything can be hacked in this market, but at what cost, and remember it has to come with a price. So if it's not profitable' a 'N3' hack will remain underground just like the 'P4' hack as been for years now. Just remember the people that do know aren't telling their sitting back and watching Dtv while the rest of us are sent ECM's. The "UnderGround" site will be the wave of the future and any above ground "FTA Site" will be targeted by "Satellite Providers" untill they are run out of business.

For those of you that think P4 was never hacked read this story, Mullen was responsible for at least 16,000 hacked cards, and that each card cost DTV and NDS $1,500 in financial losses, for a total of $24 million. DTV estimates that, in all, Mullen and his distributors put 68,000 cards on the street.
BLOG: info Added by: 0dd Thomas

Article postd on "SecurityFocus" News/10103



"DTV hacker sentenced to seven years"
Kevin Poulsen, SecurityFocus 2004-12-10


A Canadian man was sentenced to seven years in a U.S. prison this week after admitting he led a sophisticated satellite TV piracy ring that produced and sold thousands of hacked smart cards in the U.S. and Canada.
Martin Mullen, 50, was also ordered to pay DTV and its smart card provider NDS Ltd. $24 million in restitution. Mullen pled guilty in a federal court in Tampa, Florida last September to conspiracy to violate anti-piracy laws, and to entering the U.S. illegally after being deported on an unrelated matter years earlier.

According to court records, Mullen was an expert at cracking security on the smart cards DTV issues to subscribers to authorize access to television programming. In normal operation, a subscriber inserts the card into a slot in the DTV set top box, and a satellite signal from the company tells the receiver which channels, if any, the subscriber is allowed to watch, based on the unique identification number coded into each card.

In his plea agreement with prosecutors, Mullen stipulated to heading a network of over 100 distributors throughout North America that sold thousands of hacked cards granting free access to all of DTV's channels.

"The severe sentence handed down by the court is clearly warranted in this case and we applaud the judge's decision," said Jim Whalen, senior director of DTV's Signal Integrity Department, in a statement. "This sentence serves as a stark reminder that the sale and distribution of signal theft devices has grave consequences."

Under federal sentencing guidelines, Mullen's prison term was decided primarily by the amount of loss DTV suffered -- a matter that was left for the court to determine. After two days of evidentiary hearings, Judge Richard A. Lazzara accepted the government's claim that Mullen was responsible for at least 16,000 hacked cards, and that each card cost DTV and NDS $1,500 in financial losses, for a total of $24 million. DTV estimates that, in all, Mullen and his distributors put 68,000 cards on the street.

Mullen's attorney, Darlene Barror, is appealing the sentence, but did not return repeated phone calls on the case. In a posting to a Web forum, Mullen's daughter, Nicole McKenzie, said she believed the government coerced her father into pleading guilty by threatening to prosecute his family. "My parents have been married for 31 years and my dad is my two children's only father figure," McKenzie wrote. "You hear about these things on TV, but this is real life. In my opinion he was completely set up."

A long time foil of the satellite TV industry, Mullen was already embroiled in civil litigation with NDS when a private investigator working for the company found paperwork in Mullen's garbage indicating he was planning a summer trip to Florida under an assumed name, prosecutors say. The company tipped off U.S. law enforcement, and federal agents arrested Mullen at Tampa International Airport last June.

Mullen is now in custody at the Miami Federal Detention Center, and, in an odd reversal, NDS engineers are working to crack the encryption on a memory stick seized from him at his arrest, according to court records. They're hoping to find numbers for offshore bank accounts in which Mullen has allegedly stashed millions in earnings from his enterprise. Assistant U.S. Attorney Ernest Peluso, Mullen's prosecutor, says the government gave NDS the memory stick data and some other evidence because federal officials lacked the laboratory facilities to analyze customized smart card equipment.

Peluso says piracy is a serious business. "There's huge losses, really in the billions of the dollars, and they have to do with companies that provide important service to 20 million American families," he says. "These losses affect the financial viability of these companies."

By some estimates, piracy was costing DTV $1.2 billion a year when, in April, the company finished a wholesale swap-out of 17 million older access cards and shut down its legacy data stream, effectively slamming the door on signal pirates. Since then, a slow resignation has begun to settle over the pirate community, which has been unable to crack the company's fourth generation smart card, called the "P4."
:drunk::shit:

ftaviewer343
01-24-2009, 09:11 PM
I wonder if they have satellite TV in prison...

Underground Pirates......Blog date; 1-14-09

DTV has been "HACKED" for some years, and has been known and reported on only a few "underground" sites, it has not been commonly known in the FTA world of site's because the clear fact was "money" openly posting this information would be worthless to people with this information, but for the underground community it was "gold".

hey-you
01-24-2009, 10:14 PM
I wonder if they have satellite TV in prison...
Matter of fact some prison's around the world have sat tv and more , can you immagine ...that ....