agreed but if cracking it was motivated purely for the challenge of cracking it why then release the crack online?
because no matter what these pieces of flith say, it always will and always has been about piracy.
and with this i pull out of this thread, it's going nowhere
Who would believe them? This is, afterall, the internets.
I still don't get the hate, really don't. I totally understand it's your opinion and you're entitled to it, but damn...... the hate is getting out of hand.
Wonder why people don't have the same hate with TV series or anime piracy.![]()
That is true i guess but still.
We're gamers. Had we been Kotaku im sure we would have the same hate for anime piracy.
http://mygaming.co.za/forum/showthr...cy-vs-Series-Movie-Piracy?p=349177#post349177
And you do see plenty pirated movies, especially at street corners and robots.
because no matter what these pieces of flith say, it always will and always has been about piracy.
and with this i pull out of this thread, it's going nowhere
Do you have any idea how lucrative the pirate mod market is? Why would they release it to the world if it was about piracy?
I know of no pirate mod organization that released details of their cracks, since that would take money away from them.
That's what I meant by DVDs.
agreed but if cracking it was motivated purely for the challenge of cracking it why then release the crack online? Why not simply send Sony an email say " I cracked it, better luck next time slug heads" or something. Why release it and give other accessed to piracy on the ps3.
So making money from illegal cracks is ok then.
The recent cracking of the PlayStation 3's previously watertight security measures could prove seriously problematic for Sony according to industry figures, with the console opening itself up for piracy on a similar scale to that seen on the PSP.
Sony's PlayStation 3 has been the subject of several hacks that bypass the console's security measures and that hackers claim can only be addressed with a hardware update. Sony has since responded by filing for restraining orders against the group fail0verflow and the prolific George Hotz among others.
"If that hack works as reported, I don't believe that Sony can regain any control," Ubisoft Massive's Martin Walfisz told gamesindustry.biz. "They could try to employ a similar system to Xbox Live, so that people running hacked systems won't have access to PSN. But Sony won't be able to stop people from running pirated game copies as long as the machines are not hooked up online."
Walfisz went on to claim that Sony's home console could be facing a problem more serious than that which has beset its handheld counterpart. "I would assume that pirated copies can be stored on the HDD as well," said Walfisz, "making it so easy to use that PS3 piracy, given time, might even surpass the handhelds."
18 months ago, third-party PSP developers were "just about ready to jump off the cliff and pull support for the platform," says Sony's Peter Dille.
As part of an in-depth Gamasutra feature interview, Dille explained how the company's "evangelizing" since then to developers about going beyond the PlayStation 2 port to what kinds of games "make sense" on PSP has helped increase successful software on the platform.
The first fruits of these efforts are just beginning to hit the market in 2009, including Dissidia Final Fantasy, Assassin's Creed and Rock Band on PSP, and there are more to come, says Dille.
But as the PSP rebounds, piracy on the platform is still a major concern. "I'm convinced and we're convinced that piracy has taken out a big chunk of our software sales on PSP," Dille explains. "It's been a problem that the industry has to address together; it's one that I think the industry takes very seriously, but we need to do something to address this because it's criminal what's going on, quite frankly."
"It's not good for us, but it's not good for the development community. We can look at data from BitTorrent sites from the day Resistance: Retribution goes on sale and see how many copies are being downloaded illegally, and it's frankly sickening. We are spending a lot of time talking about how we can deal with that problem."
Hardware upgrades to the PSP have been speculated to be aimed in part at closing piracy 'loopholes,' although Sony has never disclosed the extent of the modifications. Even still, the fact that older versions of the hardware are fundamentally on the market complicates the situation -- even if there's a solution, there are 50 million potentially compromised units out there already.
"Those numbers are correct," says Dille. "There's a lot of hardware out there; toothpaste is out of the tube. We're not going to get that hardware back into the toothpaste container."
Dille says Sony's aiming for a "multi-pronged approach" factoring in both legal and education -- he believes that consumers could be convinced to pay for content "if they understood [that piracy] meant that a platform would go away."
"I'm not naive, but I do think that most people are inherently honest," he says. "We learned a lot from the music business, and it became so easy and so common to download illegal music -- everyone was doing it. It's almost like people lost sight with the fact that, well, "If everyone's doing it, then it can't be that bad."
"But, it actually is bad; it's bad for the platform. Again, I'm not saying that that's a magic wand; I think that we have to make sure from a technological perspective that it's not as easy as it is to do that."
The full interview with Dille on the state of Sony in 2009 is now available at Gamasutra (no registration required, please feel free to link to this feature from other websites).
But the researchers don't seem to have used Sony's network in their research — they just used the consoles they bought with their own money. Simply put, Sony claims that it's illegal for users to access their own computers in a way that Sony doesn't like. Moreover, because the CFAA has criminal as well as civil penalties, Sony is actually saying that it's a crime for users to access their own computers in a way that Sony doesn't like.
That means Sony is sending another dangerous message: that it has rights in the computer it sells you even after you buy it, and therefore can decide whether your tinkering with that computer is legal or not. We disagree. Once you buy a computer, it's yours. It shouldn't be a crime for you to access your own computer, regardless of whether Sony or any other company likes what you're doing.
What they don't get though is that they're not just giving people the ability to run Linux on the PS3 (Just get a PC you wankers!) but they have now made millions of other people unhappy. With all the programs out there that make you lag an such, people are getting turned off which dents PS3 sales. I was just playing UC2 the other day and the 'lag program' is already being used in it!!
What's ironic though, is that Sony said that the PS Move would extend the life of the PS3 for around 3 years. Now with this hack on the market I seriously think this has halved (If not more!) the life of the PS3.
What they don't get though is that they're not just giving people the ability to run Linux on the PS3 (Just get a PC you wankers!) but they have now made millions of other people unhappy. With all the programs out there that make you lag an such, people are getting turned off which dents PS3 sales. I was just playing UC2 the other day and the 'lag program' is already being used in it!!
What's ironic though, is that Sony said that the PS Move would extend the life of the PS3 for around 3 years. Now with this hack on the market I seriously think this has halved (If not more!) the life of the PS3.
Hacked or not PS3 is still way better than XBox,
*waits for flaming*![]()