When he advertised for the cheat, Kreibich described it as follows:
Kreibich also posted videos on YouTube where he demonstrated the hack in pursuit of free advertisement.
Earlier this month, Epic Games asked YouTube to take down the videos due to the Digital Millennium Copyright Act. YouTube took the videos down in response. But on June 8, Kreibich filed “counter-notifications” for his videos. On June 16, Epic Games decided to take legal action and filed a lawsuit. While Epic Games hasn’t demanded money from Robert Kreibich yet, they have asked for a trial with a jury.
Epic Games filed the lawsuit against Kreibich on grounds for copyright infringement, contributory copyright infringement, breach of contract, and California unfair competition. They hope to seek injunctive relief and damages.
Paragon is an online arena battle game where teams try to destroy each other’s bases. In March of this year, Epic allowed players to get an early access program of the multiplayer online battle arena game – which is how Kreibich was able to make his hacks in the first place. Epic was planning on doing an open beta release later this year, before Kreibich came along. There is no word yet on whether that is still happening, or if this development has made Epic wary of an open beta just yet.