Macrobstar said:
People who compare not allowing people to mod ps3s just in case of piracy to not allowing guns in case people murder someone are stupid, killing someone has ramifications, piracy does not
Its a problem because its taking something that isn't yours and supposedly losing businesses money, but unlike murder people won't feel guilty about pirating and will very rarely go to prison, so sony needs to step in and take its own precautions
Okay, I think I understand you now. What I meant by asking if you were pulling my chain or not is that, well, if no one's really getting hurt and there are no ramifications, well, uhm, why is piracy a problem? I don't mean it sarcastically, but as a genuine concern. This is about as close to a victimless crime as anyone can imagine (if it indeed is a crime), even you yourself felt the need to put "supposedly" before stating that even Sony was losing anything. There's no hard data that sales are hurt by piracy
at all, and what little data there actually is (on music, not games) clearly indicates that unlicensed digital distribution of software actually seems to drive new sales.
Also, let's always please remember that Hotz is not a pirate. He doesn't pirate games, and the root key he released is not some kind of magic piracy button (in theory, by taking that key and going through many, many hours of research and extensive hardware modification you could then pirate a game, and in theory, some guys in Europe have done it, but at no point can you take what Hotz released, type or input it into a ps3, and play an unlicensed game with it). Sony hasn't ever even proven that anyone, anywhere, has used the root key to do
anything illegal as yet. It is all pure speculation. That one "may" use Geo's released data to hurt Sony is some vague way they never really bothered to define is something that Sony expects everyone to just take their word for.