At a shareholders meeting, Sony’s CEO Howard Stringer blamed recent attacks on several of the company’s properties on several steps it took to "defend Sony’s intellectual property", presumably referring to the lawsuit Sony started against George Hotz for releasing a "jailbreaking" tool for the PlayStation 3.
As Sony tries to recover from the huge PR mess that the attacks caused, the CEO is sending the message that Sony’s infrastructure isn’t any less secure than the one of its competitors and that instead it’s just been more targeted:
Originally posted by another user
If hackers can hack Citibank, the FBI and the CIA, and yesterday the video game company Electronics Arts, then it’s a negative situation that governments may have to resolve,
Indeed, a game server at Electronic Arts has recently been broken into as consequence of a "sophisticated attack", according to the company. Sony’s PlayStation Network, the most targeted of all Sony properties, was down for almost one month.
Sony’s claims are in fact accurate, however. Part of the company’s settlement with George Hotz would effectively stop him from modifying any Sony-owned code in the future. That didn’t sit well with hacktivist group Anonymous. They published a video threatening to release data belonging to PlayStation Network users, which they did shortly after, as part of an attack known as "Operation Sony":
Throughout April and May, several of Sony’s services kept getting hammered, including Sony Music in several countries, including Japan and Greece. The frequent attacks have caused many to question how much of a concern security was for Sony, especially given the reports that the company had slashed staff responsible for securing its online infrastructure weeks before the attack took place.
PlayStation services were brought back a month ago and no further problems have happened since then. Yet, one shareholder went as far as calling for Howard Stringer’s resignation. Back in April, Stringer began a transfer of power to his right-hand man, 50-year-old Kazuo Hirai, although no plans for Stringer to fully leave have been publicized yet.
The company has reportedly spent close to $200 million refunding its customers and repairing the attack’s damages. All of this for not wanting to allow its users to jailbreak the devices they own. Now that US law has recently made iOS jailbreaking legal, shouldn’t Sony be forced to allow it on its products as well?
Nice find.
Sony just doesnt get it. The more they react agaisnt jailbreaking, the more they will be attacked.
Apple simply allowed jailbreaking now because all it does is enable more features that weren't originally open to public.
That is the same thing GeoHot did with the ps3.
Sony can either choose to continue being attacked, or allow playstation users to get the FULL experience of the PS3.
Nice find.
Sony just doesnt get it. The more they react agaisnt jailbreaking, the more they will be attacked.
Apple simply allowed jailbreaking now because all it does is enable more features that weren't originally open to public.
That is the same thing GeoHot did with the ps3.
Sony can either choose to continue being attacked, or allow playstation users to get the FULL experience of the PS3.
not to mention apple steals all of its new features from jailbreak users, eg. picture in home screen, multitasking. just to name a few.
not to mention apple steals all of its new features from jailbreak users, eg. picture in home screen, multitasking. just to name a few.
sony doesnt care at all for its users.
Exactly. No matter how many times they are hacked, no matter how much they change the keys and the server,they will react to it, and they will be hacked again. Nothing in Un-Hackable. Sony was just an easy target and they are "trying" to fight back.
this stupid ass what when they hack the citybank ps3 hackers will never do it stupid sonys with very cheap comments and they are really bigass dumb gaybitches
if its jailbreaking
i'd say to sony do as apple does fight jailbreaking but do not ban it
Jailbreaking is legal for handheld devices *psp ngp phones in all kinds* and illegal for home devices? WTF if its the other way around would be better