Play Acid Factory Hacked

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Acid Factory Flash Game shoot the monsters dont let the acid or monsters touch you, get teleported to the next level of acid factory by collecting batteries for power. To win at acid factory flash game you must kill the acid factory flash monsters and collect the batteries to score points.

[POWDER]Standard powder.
[WATER]Water splash.
[FIRE]Fire spark.
[SEED]Cast seeds to grow trees.
[G-POWDER]Gunpowder. Explosive, keep fire away!
[FAN]Fan. Continuously sends wind.
[ICE]Smashing ice becomes snow.
[S-BALL]Super ball.
[CLONE]Clone tool. Multiply an object by clicking over it.
[F-WORKS]Set off fireworks of the selected dot with the other click.
[OIL]Oil. Flammable liquid.
[C-4]Plastic bomb.
[STONE]Stone. It's heavy but breakable.
[MAGMA]Magma. It burns everything.
[VIRUS]Virus. Transforms dots.
[NITRO]Nitroglycerin. High-sensitivity explosive.
[ANT]Ants. When they touch solids, they create a mysterious path!
[TORCH]Torch burns everything but keep water away.
[GAS]Flammable gas.
[SOAPY]Soapy water makes bubbles!
[THUNDER]Thunder.
[METAL]Metal conducts electricity.
[BOMB]Bomb explodes when it touches powder.
[LASER]Laser goes straight. It reflects against the polished metal.
[ACID]Acid melts various things.
[VINE]Vine grows in a tangled mass.
[SALT]Salt becomes sea water when melted.
[GLASS]Glass. Transparent dots.
[BIRD]Birds fly with a flock.
[MERCURY]Mercury. Heavy liquid metal.
[SPARK]Calm fire spark.
[FUSE]Fuse. It gradually burns.
[CLOUD]Rain cloud, snow cloud, and thunder cloud.
[PUMP]Liquid and gas are carried.
* PEN-S adjusts the pen size.
[WIND]Send wind toward the arrow direction.
[AIR]Left click increases pressure while right click decreases it.
[DRAG]Drag various objects.
[BUBBLE]Soap bubbles. Drag as if drawing a circle.
[WHEEL]Gear. * Select [ERASE] to deletes.
[PLAYER]Add a playable Stickman.
←→ - Move
↑ - Jump
↓ - Action
* It changes the attribution when touching powder.
* WASD key for 2P.
[FIGHTER]Fighting Stickman.
[BOX]Box. Throw, blow or rotate it.
[BALL]Ball. It rolls very well.
* The selected dot ball will be added with the other click.
[CREATE]The object that touches is created.
[BLOCK]It blocks wind or dots.
[ERASE]Delete blocks or gears.
* Also it deletes the outer block.
[CLEAR]Delete erasers, dots or wind.
[Copy/Paste]Copy & Paste.
Drag to copy, and click to paste.
[TEXT]Select colors to depict the characters.
font - Change of font
style- PLAIN, BOLD, ITALIC
size - size of character
[PEN]Change the drawing style.
free - free line
line - straight line
lock - width & height
paint- Painting out
[PEN-S]Pen size. Adjust the drawing pen size.
[SCALE]Zoom in and out by clicking. Drag to move.
[SPEED]Change speed. * The enter key playbacks frame by frame.
[Start/Stop]Start/Stop the time.
[UPLOAD]Upload. * See below.
[SAVE]Save temporary.
[LOAD]Load temporary.
[MiniMap]Display of thumbnail.
[MENU]Setup menu.
STR - Show name
NUM - Show number of dots
[SIDE]Off screen settings.
OFF - Hide
LOOP - Move opposite
[GRID]Grid line.
[BG]Background effect
non - hide
air - high pressure (green) and low pressure (blue)
line - pressure and streamline (wind)
blur - motion blur
shade - blur filter
aura - aura filter
light - light (additive synthesis)
toon - toon shader
mesh - Draw wind as line
gray - gray scale
track - trajectory filter
dark - dark filter
TG - thermography
siluet - silhouette
[DOT]Maximum number of dots.
[RESET]Reset.

Getting my PlayStation account hacked was terrible, but Sony made it a whole lot worse.Instead of helping me, Sony decided that I had to pay for the games that my hacker purchased, or face a permanent ban on my account.It all started Saturday afternoon. I was scrolling through my inbox and noticed some odd emails from PlayStation, all of them at 3:01 AM. There were three $25 payments to my PlayStation wallet, and a purchase for NBA 2K16 and some credits. After checking to make sure my roommate hadn’t drunkenly purchased the game, thinking he’d pay me back later, I noticed even more concerning emails.

While I was sleeping, someone locked me out of my own account.The first asked me to confirm a change to my PlayStation account’s email. The email wasn’t opened, nor had any odd devices accessed my email account, but another message less than a minute later confirmed the email change. While I was sleeping, someone locked me out of my own account.But PlayStation requires you to confirm an email change by clicking a link in an email sent to the old account first, right? Wrong.As it turns out, hackers have an easy way around this problem. Payment info, or at least a portion of it, is visible in the web interface for a PlayStation account. Once an attacker has your password, they can chat with Sony tech support, explain that they don’t have access to that email anymore, and use the visible info in the account to verify their identity, changing the email on the account to prevent recovery by its rightful owner — in this case, me.In the meantime, they added a device to my account, a PS Vita.

Unlike a PS3 or PS4, a PS Vita can’t be removed from the account by Web, it can only be deactivated from the device itself.Fortunately, social hacking your way through tech support tends to be a double-edged sword, and I knew I would be able to wrestle my account back by providing the right info. Both consoles that regularly access the account are in my home, so that’s a form of proof, and because Sony doesn’t let users change their user names, no email changes could alter my gamertag. Playboy pdf download free. Following the paper trailThis all happened on a Sunday, so Sony’s phone support wasn’t open, and I was forced to use the text chat. This actually ended up working to my benefit, as we’ll see shortly, but it also raises some problems of its own.I wasn’t at home when I noticed the hacker’s activities, but I needed to stop the intruder from making any more purchases. I called support, and an agent there was quick to de-authorize my PlayStation account from making any more pre-approved purchases.

Then, I filed a dispute on all three $25 charges. I don’t own a PS Vita, but it’s stuck on my accountOnce I got home, I sat down at a computer. At first, the agent was helpful. The intrusion and email changing were a separate issue from the disputed purchases, so we would deal with them one at a time.The agent rolled back the account’s email to the previous address (mine), and forced a password reset when I confirmed the change.

Then I was a little bewildered as the agent asked: “Now what do you want to do about the purchases?”“I don’t want NBA 2K16, and I don’t want to add $75 to my PlayStation account,” I said. It sounded simple enough, or so I thought.The agent passed the buck. They explained that in order to issue a refund, I needed to cancel the dispute with PayPal. Essentially, PayPal had taken the money back from Sony, and I needed to have PayPal release it so Sony could hand it back to me.So I contacted PayPal. This turned out to be a process in and of itself. Because the dispute was security related, I had to call PayPal support, verify my identity, and then say in no uncertain terms that I was closing the case permanently, and get a guarantee that PayPal wouldn’t reopen it.I informed the Sony tech support agent once the dispute was canceled.

I didn’t get a human response. Instead, I got a copied and pasted statement explaining that Sony doesn’t offer refunds, and the funds would only be returned to my wallet. I asked what would happen if I issued a chargeback at the debit card level, and the agent explained matter-of-factly that my account would be banned until I paid the $75 in fraudulent charges.After six years as a paying PlayStation customer, my account was now being held hostage, not by a hacker, but by Sony. I had to cover the cost of the metaphorical broken window, or my account was going to be locked. Basically, I had to apologize and pay for a thief.

Why hasn’t Sony learned?You would think Sony would know how to handle hacking, especially after its multiple massive breaches ( and ) in the last five years, but it hasn’t learned. The PlayStation network has been around since 2006, but there’s no two-factor authentication, and visible payment info on the web front-end. This leaves a wide enough security hole for an elephant to walk through. The customer service agent suggested that I only use prepaid cards, but that’s more of a workaround than a real solution. If I disputed the charges, my account would be banned until I paid the fraudulent charges.Sony has a history of poor responses to hacking. Back in 2011 when PlayStation Network went down for almost a month, the gaming brand offered affected players one month of PlayStation Plus, which meant you got a few games that were disabled after the month ended if you didn’t become a paying subscriber.You could argue that the way it treated me is to avoid refunding purchases that people made accidentally (or drunkenly), but even if a few people take advantage of the system for an ill-gotten refund, at least they’ll stick with PlayStation.

It also took me several hours of legwork over email, Twitter, and customer support to reach that point, which would be a lot of work to go through just to buy a different game.We reached out to our press contact at PlayStation for comment, and this was the response:After reviewing your inquiry, we found there was some miscommunication between our customer service agents on this case and we apologize for the inconvenience this may have caused. We are currently working on issuing a refund to your account, and we are addressing the communication issues.Please be assured that there was no indication that your account was compromised through the PlayStation Network. We do recommend our users maintain good account security, such as regularly changing their password and creating login credentials that differ from other services they use.I have to wonder whether I would have reached this point had I not pressed my advantage as a tech journalist. A number of readers have reached out about very similar situations, (one involving the same game less than an hour apart), and only some were lucky enough to receive an actual refund. That’s all despite the fact that PlayStation doesn’t offer refunds as a policy. If my account wasn’t compromised, why bend the rules?The second half of the statement is a boilerplate response that separates Sony from any sort of liability regarding the incident. Allowing users to select a different login ID from email would help, as would two-factor authentication.

These modern security methods aren’t hard to implement, nor are they uncommon in the gaming world.As for me, I now have to decide whether I buy FIFA 16 on PS4 or PC. Right now, I’m not a big fan of Sony’s attitude or policies. It’s bad enough to be hacked, but it’s even worse to have to pay for the digital damage.Updated on 4/14/16 by Brad Bourque: Added the official response from PlayStation.Editors' Recommendations.