Yes. It allows you to impersonate someone, cause issues for other players under their name, sell them on to others to want to do bad things like that etc.
In Roblox's case there are items that sell for thousands of dollars. In Minecraft's case there's a very large marketplace for the accounts themselves - the game has a lot of cheaters that get banned from servers regularly and cycle through accounts to keep playing.
Not even close. It takes down a whole computer. My son downloaded a file he thought was a friend he hadn't heard from for awhile to look at the project he was working on. Had to wipe the computer. Fortunately his brother had the skills to save his files and check that they were clean. They also used his card to charge steam account stuff. Had to warn all his friends he had been infected and nuke his discord including his own server. Had to get a new bank card.
> I'm doing bad shit, but please don't get angry at me. I'm not the problem here, you are
"For educational purposes" is the new "It's just a joke, man."
I get the argument that non-disclosure isn't working ("isn't perfect" would be a better phrasing) and that once the source code is out there, you can't contain its spread. But I'm not making a political argument here on how to prevent this from happening, but a moral argument (pretty obvious in my post). Basically if you spread this "for educational purposes" *wink*wink* you are part of the problem and most of your justifications are worthless and disengenuine. And if you're really a free speech advocate you allow me my moral judgement.