hauton said:So a DDoS attack on PlayStation.com, but nothing functionality-wise?
Like Visa/Mastercard, right?
edit: just noticed playstation.com worked for me
you're presuming George is able to pay his lawyers all the way until the end of the trial... and even then, i don't know that it's automatic that Sony would have to pay his legally costs.ClosingADoor said:If Sony loses, don't they have to pay the other sides legal costs?
Malio said:Mission Accomplished: I am lulzing at their torment of Sony.
Jax said:You'd think they'll do some about wall street greed/ Bernie madoff etc the ilk of real life criminals. Someones who's fucked with the livelihoods of millions of people...
.... Sony.
Ah well...
Magic Mushroom said:We are anonymous.
We are virgin.
Morn said:People are talking shit about Anonymous in this thread. GAF had better watch out. You DO NOT talk shit about Anonymous.
What talent and how? DDOS Kadafi's website or something? They can do nothing but get a bit of attention for while.TheBanditKing said:They could use their talents to actually defend people against true tyranny and greed
We're gonna have to agree to disagree here. The LoC plainly stated that the firmware is provided for free, thus there could be no claim that the jailbreak was losing them money. Then, there can be no discussion about it hurting sales of the device because one must own the device to jailbreak it. What you are arguing for is legal protections for a loss leader business model, claiming that someone purchasing the system is damaging Sony. That's ridiculous at best. Your only stance for that would have to be that each system sold would have to be for piracy and never purchase anything, not even BD movies. Otherwise, someone purchasing a PS3 and never buying a game, or anything on PSN, but using it solely as a good BD player, has been harmed Sony and that should be protected.staticneuron said:Tthe console makers make their money mainly off of software sales. Hence MS and Sony taking a risk and eating losses. Apple does not. They make money through carrier deals, and by selling device with the operating system. Their App store is an "additional" means of making money but not the sole or primary means.
First, see above. Second, the same exact argument could be made for any device that is hacked. Again, it has been found and is the reason the LoC would not entertain piracy discussion, that just because something could lead to piracy, does not negate its use.Again, different means of making money as stated above. In the case of console makers eating costs to bring it to market, they can easily point out how subverted security can be concern for their IP rights on any software that needs to be run on the device and also with the effect on the market.
The LoC found that modifying to run apps "legally obtained" was fine. They found that the modification of the firmware was fair use because it was modified to operate just as intended, but to allow software not approved, but legally obtained. Your argument appears to hinge on this idea that piracy happens on the PS3 and not phones and modifying firmware on phones is different than consoles because of piracy. The LoC did not look at the "business model" of phones as you say, that looked if sales of the device would be hurt (which they correctly noted was impossible). That's absurd, because you're saying if phones were sold as loss leaders, this exemption would likely have been different. Not the case at all. The LoC did not care about the "business model", but that the firmware was provided for free and in order to jailbreak a phone, you had to purchase it. By purchasing the phone, you did exactly what the manufacturer hoped for. If they sold said phone for a loss, that's their own poor business model.The bottom quotes were the rulings and the top three were what the eff put forth. What I simply was pointing out is that they got into specifics. Despite you not acknowledging what I pointed out, they mainly revolve around actual ownership of device, modification in terms of private use (to run apps you own) and the respective business models for the device in question and the effect the security bypass would have. It is only when you ignore specifics that you can draw parallels and the system doesn't work like that.
What? XBMC has extremely robust codec. What are you looking for that isn't supported?Agreed. I just wish they would have a bit more robust codec support.
Lol no you're not.MoogPaul said:Not supporting anything they do, but am I the only one that finds the irony in a bunch of nerds on a video game internet forum mocking other nerds on the internet?
low-G said:They're overrated, they couldn't hack this account in a thousand years. The sad thing is people associate their attacks with some sort of legitimate fault in society.
TheBanditKing said:just goes to show you how childish they really are. They could use their talents to actually defend people against true tyranny and greed and yet they choose to waste their collective efforts defending some whinny zit faced looser with too much free time who bit of more then he could chew. All at the expense of the general public like us.....thanks, we always needed another savior who screws us and tells us to look at the bigger picture.
Magic Mushroom said:We are anonymous.
We are virgin.
Freyjadour said:You know approximately shit about "hacking". The majority of you in this thread need to stop playing hacker extraordinaire. You may not think it suits Anonymous, but it sure as hell does not suit you.
They have, and they will. Take a look at so many of their other agendas. Unfortunately, the world isn't Ghost in the Shell and Anonymous are no Laughing Man, but they find things they disagree strongly in: i.e. corruption, spurious legal battles over technologically important issues that extend beyond petty concerns like piracy and "why can't I play CoD for 3 hours", hateful religious groups, and they set out to do what they can against them. You may not agree with vigilante justice in this case, but the day that Anonymous declares itself truly against Gaddafi, WBC, or the like, you'd all be behind it. This is because your problem with all of this doesn't lie in Anonymous, their methods, or their philosophy, but rather than someone, anyone is preventing you from accessing your video games for a matter of hours on a given day. If anything, I'd say that overwhelming concern is more childish a viewpoint than I could possibly fathom in this situation.
The fact that you describe anyone other than anonymous as childish in this case is hysterical. Anonymous epitomizes childish behavior.Freyjadour said:They have, and they will. Take a look at so many of their other agendas. Unfortunately, the world isn't Ghost in the Shell and Anonymous are no Laughing Man, but they find things they disagree strongly in: i.e. corruption, spurious legal battles over technologically important issues that extend beyond petty concerns like piracy and "why can't I play CoD for 3 hours", hateful religious groups, and they set out to do what they can against them. You may not agree with vigilante justice in this case, but the day that Anonymous declares itself truly against Gaddafi, WBC, or the like, you'd all be behind it. This is because your problem with all of this doesn't lie in Anonymous, their methods, or their philosophy, but rather than someone, anyone is preventing you from accessing your video games for a matter of hours on a given day. If anything, I'd say that overwhelming concern is more childish a viewpoint than I could possibly fathom in this situation.
HBGary Federal would disagree.ClosingADoor said:What talent and how? DDOS Kadafi's website or something? They can do nothing but get a bit of attention for while.
Massa said:You need to get off your high horse.
Massa said:People are free not to support the shady tactics employed by this group no matter what the cause is. Whether they agree with the cause or not is irrelevant as the real point of contention here are the methods used, not the causes supported.
Massa said:And by the way, no self respecting hacker would approve of a DDoS attack.
Pastry said:The fact that you describe anyone other than anonymous as childish in this case is hysterical. Anonymous epitomizes childish behavior.
Really?Freyjadour said:You may not agree with vigilante justice in this case, but the day that Anonymous declares itself truly against Gaddafi, WBC, or the like, you'd all be behind it.
i don't support someone using illegal tactics in the name of a cause i support because it tars the entire cause with a negative brush.Freyjadour said:They have, and they will. Take a look at so many of their other agendas. Unfortunately, the world isn't Ghost in the Shell and Anonymous are no Laughing Man, but they find things they disagree strongly in: i.e. corruption, spurious legal battles over technologically important issues that extend beyond petty concerns like piracy and "why can't I play CoD for 3 hours", hateful religious groups, and they set out to do what they can against them. You may not agree with vigilante justice in this case, but the day that Anonymous declares itself truly against Gaddafi, WBC, or the like, you'd all be behind it. This is because your problem with all of this doesn't lie in Anonymous, their methods, or their philosophy, but rather than someone, anyone is preventing you from accessing your video games for a matter of hours on a given day. If anything, I'd say that overwhelming concern is more childish a viewpoint than I could possibly fathom in this situation.
Freyjadour said:I could have stopped reading here.
brentech said:Really?
It's not exactly vigilante justice when you throw a grenade into a room with 99 civilians and 1 "bad guy". No matter how you try to split it and spin it, their actions are 100% hypocritical whether it's their intentions or not. THE OUTCOME is.
Exactly, it's an analogy. I didn't say that's why they did....but their actions present repercussions for thousands of people who don't give 2 shits.Freyjadour said:Here's me not responding to atrociously exaggerated analogies.
Revenant said:What some people think this will accomplish: Oh man PSN and playstation.com went down, this will surely make people either A. magically take notice of this lawsuit, especially joe bro gamer who plays madden once in awhile! or B. people will be so super mad at Sony for PSN being down that they're gonna stop buying Sony products and supporting their evil ways!
What it'll actually do: Dude turns on PS3, tries to go online, sees he can't, scratches balls and goes and does something else.
Speevy said:One day these hackers will look back and consider how stupid and utterly inconsequential the hours they dedicated to this nonsense were.
Speevy said:One day these hackers will look back and consider how stupid and utterly inconsequential the hours they dedicated to this nonsense were.
Freyjadour said:I see this as less of a problem with the methods and more of a problem with the ball-scratching masses, as it were. People aren't informed enough about the long-ranging consequences of things like this (note: not just whether or not I can put CFW/Homebrew on my PS3), or they simply don't care. That's truly a shame.
Why's that a shame? Buy a few games a year, play them and be done with it. I don't see a problem with that. Most people don't really care if they can or can not modify their console, since they won't anyway. Most people don't care if they buy a game er technically license it as long as it works.Freyjadour said:I see this as less of a problem with the methods and more of a problem with the ball-scratching masses, as it were. People aren't informed enough about the long-ranging consequences of things like this (note: not just whether or not I can put CFW/Homebrew on my PS3), or they simply don't care. That's truly a shame.
Freyjadour said:I see this as less of a problem with the methods and more of a problem with the ball-scratching masses, as it were. People aren't informed enough about the long-ranging consequences of things like this (note: not just whether or not I can put CFW/Homebrew on my PS3), or they simply don't care. That's truly a shame.
It's laughable that you mentioned the VT25. Who's blacks rise beyond .004 after awhile.
That's not a shame. Most people have better things to worry about in their lives over their little video game toy.Freyjadour said:I see this as less of a problem with the methods and more of a problem with the ball-scratching masses, as it were. People aren't informed enough about the long-ranging consequences of things like this (note: not just whether or not I can put CFW/Homebrew on my PS3), or they simply don't care. That's truly a shame.
squatingyeti said:We're gonna have to agree to disagree here. The LoC plainly stated that the firmware is provided for free, thus there could be no claim that the jailbreak was losing them money. Then, there can be no discussion about it hurting sales of the device because one must own the device to jailbreak it. What you are arguing for is legal protections for a loss leader business model, claiming that someone purchasing the system is damaging Sony. That's ridiculous at best. Your only stance for that would have to be that each system sold would have to be for piracy and never purchase anything, not even BD movies. Otherwise, someone purchasing a PS3 and never buying a game, or anything on PSN, but using it solely as a good BD player, has been harmed Sony and that should be protected.
Not entirely. Some of the very issues I mentioned above have no equivalent in the Iphone/cellphone discussion. And that is why I pointed out the devil is in the details. The LoC DID discuss potential harm and that would include piracy but if you think about what can be done on an Iphone, the responsibilities either lie with the consumer protecting their own information or Apple protecting their own service. There is no other medium in between that can be at stake.squatingyeti said:First, see above. Second, the same exact argument could be made for any device that is hacked. Again, it has been found and is the reason the LoC would not entertain piracy discussion, that just because something could lead to piracy, does not negate its use.
squatingyeti said:The LoC found that modifying to run apps "legally obtained" was fine. They found that the modification of the firmware was fair use because it was modified to operate just as intended, but to allow software not approved, but legally obtained. Your argument appears to hinge on this idea that piracy happens on the PS3 and not phones and modifying firmware on phones is different than consoles because of piracy. The LoC did not look at the "business model" of phones as you say, that looked if sales of the device would be hurt (which they correctly noted was impossible). That's absurd, because you're saying if phones were sold as loss leaders, this exemption would likely have been different. Not the case at all. The LoC did not care about the "business model", but that the firmware was provided for free and in order to jailbreak a phone, you had to purchase it. By purchasing the phone, you did exactly what the manufacturer hoped for. If they sold said phone for a loss, that's their own poor business model.
squatingyeti said:BTW, does the phone exemption allow for jailbreaking the iPhone or ALL phones? Now, realize most phones never had any illusion of ownership of the software or even being remotely an open type of platform. The reason we keep talking about the iPhone was because Apple was the main party against the exemption.
squatingyeti said:What? XBMC has extremely robust codec. What are you looking for that isn't supported?
Princess Skittles said:That's not a shame. Most people have better things to worry about in their lives over their little video game toy.
Freyjadour said:You know approximately shit about "hacking". The majority of you in this thread need to stop playing hacker extraordinaire. You may not think it suits Anonymous, but it sure as hell does not suit you.
blaccat said:So why they go through the headache of hacking their console?, if they care enough to hack their console they better be fully aware of the consequences.
squatingyeti said:I can't help but continue to laugh at nerds on GAF talking about some supposed other nerds and their basement dwelling.
beast786 said:What about the nerds who laugh at the nerds talking about some nerds?
UntoldDreams said:Endorsing vigilantism is akin to saying that you don't believe people need to follow the law.
It must be nice to arbitrarily ignore laws you don't like. Laws like "no stealing" or "no damaging other people's property" always gets in the way of my fun.
Princess Skittles said:That's not a shame. Most people have better things to worry about in their lives over their little video game toy.
In America.Freyjadour said:This (should) set a standard for so many different platforms and their usage.
And what if I'm laughing at those nerds? Have I created some kind of singularity where every nerd laughing at another nerd ends up destroying all of reality as we know it?squatingyeti said:They shall truly inherit the Earth?
ClosingADoor said:In America.
Massa said:And by the way, no self respecting hacker would approve of a DDoS attack.
Freyjadour said:That narrow-minded perspective on this entire issue is what will slowly rip rights away from consumers entirely. There is a reason why I mentioned the "long-ranging" consequences of this lawsuit that go beyond "their little video game toy". This (should) set a standard for so many different platforms and their usage.
The shame is the same shame that comes from the general populations' lack of care about issues such as COICA. Put the issue in front of them when it isn't affecting them (i.e. CFW on a PS3) and they do not care. Later, when the issue is law or precedent, and it does affect them, they suddenly do care. Or they just learn complacency and accept whatever is put in front of them.
Regardless, the old "forest for the trees" adage has been a constant problem in the discussions of this lawsuit on this forum, and nothing I say is going to stop it. If one continues to view the case merely in terms of Sony and GeoHot, the issue remains a simple one. Understanding the implications of the end results of this lawsuit is a different matter altogether.
Freyjadour said:That narrow-minded perspective on this entire issue is what will slowly rip rights away from consumers entirely. There is a reason why I mentioned the "long-ranging" consequences of this lawsuit that go beyond "their little video game toy". This (should) set a standard for so many different platforms and their usage.
The shame is the same shame that comes from the general populations' lack of care about issues such as COICA. Put the issue in front of them when it isn't affecting them (i.e. CFW on a PS3) and they do not care. Later, when the issue is law or precedent, and it does affect them, they suddenly do care. Or they just learn complacency and accept whatever is put in front of them.
Regardless, the old "forest for the trees" adage has been a constant problem in the discussions of this lawsuit on this forum, and nothing I say is going to stop it. If one continues to view the case merely in terms of Sony and GeoHot, the issue remains a simple one. Understanding the implications of the end results of this lawsuit is a different matter altogether.
Freyjadour said:Not that what you quoted had any relevance to your response whatsoever, but I'll answer it. My point earlier was not to endorse vigilantism in the sense that you imply, but rather to point out that Anonymous has targeted universally disliked organizations, and the majority of the passion in the responses here has less to do with the methods and philosophy and more to do with the target. Sony is a controversial target, understandably, and it is perfectly reasonable to disagree with Anonymous on their choice of this target, but at the very least admit that rather than cover it up with a rant about the methods.
UntoldDreams said:Actually, what I said makes perfect sense in the context that I don't condone vigilantism.
Do you? You readily imply that by targeting "universally disliked" things vigilantism is justifiable.
I am not debating whether "Sony is a noble target" I am saying I disagree with their methods period.
Are you ok with their activity as long as it matches your personal world view of who gets punished?
/ThreadCrewnh said:And what if I'm laughing at those nerds? Have I created some kind of singularity where every nerd laughing at another nerd ends up destroying all of reality as we know it?