> Much of the cheating the Technology Division deals with comes from professionals, who will buy a used game machine, put it in their garage and plumb it for vulnerabilities.
> “They are looking to explore how they can exploit the machine from a mechanical standpoint,” says Jim Barbee, chief of the division. That means physical hacks aimed at the coin hopper or the bill reader. Software vulnerabilities like Kane’s are nearly unheard of.
> “They are looking to explore how they can exploit the machine from a mechanical standpoint,” says Jim Barbee, chief of the division. That means physical hacks aimed at the coin hopper or the bill reader. Software vulnerabilities like Kane’s are nearly unheard of.
Someone should sell them a fuzzing suite.