LulzSec Nabs Source Code for Sony Dev Site

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Kopikatsu

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May 27, 2010
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crazythunder83 said:
Especially since the Department of Homeland Security and the FBI, and a slew of other multinational departments are already on the case of the PSN Network hack.
PSN Network? Playstation Network Network?

Sorry, it was just a minor thing that bugged me. D:
 

piplink

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because of all this im selling my psp and getting an xbox internet adaptor, i'll only buy a ps3 if this whole thing blows over and there is no risk to my dad's credit card.
 

crazythunder83

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Jan 23, 2011
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Kopikatsu said:
crazythunder83 said:
Especially since the Department of Homeland Security and the FBI, and a slew of other multinational departments are already on the case of the PSN Network hack.
PSN Network? Playstation Network Network?

Sorry, it was just a minor thing that bugged me. D:
I think you're splitting hairs there Mr. Perfect
 

-|-

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Aug 28, 2010
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JET1971 said:
And i mentioned fanboys, maybe next time i will say you instead.
I read your entire post. The fact that you think I'm a fanboy says more about you than me.

I can totally understand not wanting to buy sony's products. But what it comes down to is this and only this:

- If you think the products are shit, then don't buy them.
- If you think the tech is a backwards step, then don't buy it.
- If you don't like the 'rental' model for a product then don't buy it.
- If you think they can't be trusted with your data then don't give them it.
- If you don't like the terms and conditions applied to the services, then don't use them.

If enough people agree with you then the market will do the work.

What I really don't understand is the hatred and the wanting to bring sony down. Plenty of people do like their products, have fun with them etc. But, oh no, people like you see these people as idiots and you would like to see their freedom to purchase them removed.

It's the same with your contempt for apple users. I really don't like their products or their business model. But you know what I do? I simply don't buy anything made by them. You know what I don't do? Engage in criminal behaviour and then claim the moral high ground.

That anyone supports these people, well, quite frankly it amazes me.

(Also the whole rental/purchase model for consoles is overblown and for 99.99% of users it's a total irrelevance. The 0.01% who it actually affects can exercise their consumer rights by purchasing something else, there are plenty of products on the market. They don't the right to screw over everyone else just because they disapprove).
 

JET1971

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-|- said:
JET1971 said:
And i mentioned fanboys, maybe next time i will say you instead.
I read your entire post. The fact that you think I'm a fanboy says more about you than me.
Where did I say i support the hackers?
Where did i say that Sony products are shit?
Where did I say I wanted Sony to go down?
contempt for Sony or Apple users? where is that? I do believe I stated a subset of those users and not all of them as a whole.
 

poiuppx

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Nov 17, 2009
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fundayz said:
Belzera said:
Does anyone actually think these HAckers are working for the customers benefit? I mean didn't they ask for Donations?
Why does this "argument" keep being brought up? It has been obvious from the very beginning that this group of hackers doesn't care about the customers. The fact that customers are affected by their hacks is just collateral damage that they really don't give two hoots about.

I support not so much the group, but the repercussions of their actions. Hopefully this will make it clear that the internet is not separate from the "real world". It's about time all companies, not just game/console developers, understand that the internet can and does have power.

Making a cruel example out of a company that clearly does not want to learn its lesson is a way to bring this point across.
The problem is, this cruel example is just going to result in companies and governments deciding now is a good time to start making the punishment for this sort of thing on par with storming the main offices with loaded guns. And the fact is, if they want to find them, they'll figure it out eventually; the government and major companies have a hell of a lot more money and resources than these guys. The whole donation thing is only going to make it that much easier in the end. And all they'll have done is to make peoples' lives suck for a while, make the punishment for doing this stuff that much more severe in the future, and eventually get their asses tossed in jail, at best. At that point, who gets the lulz? Does their past self get lulz credit for screwing over their present self?

Ugh. This is why schadenfreude should not be a valid philosophical choice. It ends badly for all.
 

-|-

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Aug 28, 2010
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JET1971 said:
-|- said:
JET1971 said:
And i mentioned fanboys, maybe next time i will say you instead.
I read your entire post. The fact that you think I'm a fanboy says more about you than me.
Where did I say i support the hackers?
Where did i say that Sony products are shit?
Where did I say I wanted Sony to go down?
contempt for Sony or Apple users? where is that? I do believe I stated a subset of those users and not all of them as a whole.
You're a wily one adjusting your narrative after the fact. I won't complain though as it appears you agree that the hackers are douches and sony has a right to exist even if you don't like what they do. Well, apart from the "you people are idiots" bit (when they are not on the whole) or the "sony doesn't care about customers", when of course it does. If it takes them for granted eventually they will go elsewhere and sony sure as hell doesn't want that. I think what you mean is that it only cares about them at a level that maximizes profits. But really, so what? Again it comes down to choice about how people want to spend the money they've worked for.
 

fundayz

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Feb 22, 2010
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poiuppx said:
The problem is, this cruel example is just going to result in companies and governments deciding now is a good time to start making the punishment for this sort of thing on par with storming the main offices with loaded guns. And the fact is, if they want to find them, they'll figure it out eventually; the government and major companies have a hell of a lot more money and resources than these guys. The whole donation thing is only going to make it that much easier in the end. And all they'll have done is to make peoples' lives suck for a while, make the punishment for doing this stuff that much more severe in the future, and eventually get their asses tossed in jail, at best. At that point, who gets the lulz? Does their past self get lulz credit for screwing over their present self?

Ugh. This is why schadenfreude should not be a valid philosophical choice. It ends badly for all.
You gotta try to think past the obvious.

What lulzsec has done to Sony is many times more damaging, financially and publicly, than what storming their offices with loaded guns could even hope to accomplish.

Even if they are caught, lulzsec will have sent a very strong message to ALL companies: The Internet is very powerful, it can and does affect the financial status of major corporations, and everybody needs to behave accordingly. Gone is the time when the internet was a separate entity from the "real" world.

Will this affect the stance of governments and corporations on hacking and networking? Of course, and this is a good thing.

Companies NEED to up their security ante and governments NEED to realize hacking can be just as damaging as a "real world" crime.
 

poiuppx

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Nov 17, 2009
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fundayz said:
poiuppx said:
The problem is, this cruel example is just going to result in companies and governments deciding now is a good time to start making the punishment for this sort of thing on par with storming the main offices with loaded guns. And the fact is, if they want to find them, they'll figure it out eventually; the government and major companies have a hell of a lot more money and resources than these guys. The whole donation thing is only going to make it that much easier in the end. And all they'll have done is to make peoples' lives suck for a while, make the punishment for doing this stuff that much more severe in the future, and eventually get their asses tossed in jail, at best. At that point, who gets the lulz? Does their past self get lulz credit for screwing over their present self?

Ugh. This is why schadenfreude should not be a valid philosophical choice. It ends badly for all.
You gotta try to think past the obvious.

What lulzsec has done to Sony is many times more damaging, financially and publicly, than what storming their offices with loaded guns could even hope to accomplish.

Even if they are caught, lulzsec will have sent a very strong message to ALL companies: The Internet is very powerful, it can and does affect the financial status of major corporations, and everybody needs to behave accordingly. Gone is the time when the internet was a separate entity from the "real" world.

Will this affect the stance of governments and corporations on hacking and networking? Of course, and this is a good thing.

Companies NEED to up their security ante and governments NEED to realize hacking can be just as damaging as a "real world" crime.
With all due respect, I think we're both coming at this with different definitions of thinking past the obvious. You look at this as an object lesson, one that companies and governments needed. I look at this and see the end result; hackers of all stripes being in effect demonized so hard, with so much money and power behind them, that the days of freedom on the internet are going to rapidly vanish into the ether. Hurting the big companies hurts GDP. Attacking government sites makes them pissed. Make it look big enough, and we get Red Scare Part Deux: The Lulzining.

All those scary laws people ranted against in Australia, constraining the internet? They'll look downright Mr. Rogers's Neighborhood by the time lawmakers are done with this, if this trend continues. They won't treat this as real world crime, they'll blow the damn results out of proportion on scales that only a pissed and scared government can.

Long rant short, because I don't think either of us want endless rants on this subject, I look at what Lulzsec is doing and all I can think is that this is how the Wild West of the Internet will die; because of guys like this convincing common folk that they need protecting on the big scary internet, damn the cost or the removal of rights. And in the end, what does that kind of attention get guys like Lulzsec? Because in the end, the guys who will get it worst will be them.