This, along with the fact that the gaming juggernaut is suing a 14 year-old, strongly suggests that Epic had no idea who it was suing. 64 it is illegal to release under age individuals' personal information by any agencies." Referencing State of Delaware House Bill No. has released the defendants name publicly, therefore allowing news articles and different online publications to obtain his name and in turn release additional information. In the elder Rogers' response letter (PDF), she writes that: There are a few other wrinkles to that as well. The lawsuits began in October, but the age of one of Epic's targets has only recently come to light. The cheats in question were apparently aim-bots (similar to cheats Ubisoft has battled in The Division and Rainbow Six: Siege) that cost between $5 - $15 per month, according to Kotaku. Rogers' mother filed a letter with North Carolina's US District Court saying that Epic "has no capability of proving any form of modification" because her son merely installed cheats he downloaded from Addicted Cheats, versus altering the game's source code himself. Specifically, Epic Games is suing 14 year-old Caleb Rogers for allegedly modding the game and causing the developer to lose profits from his activity in the free-to-play "Battle Royale" mode for Fortnite. The fight against people cheating in online games is getting ugly.
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