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wraggster
January 9th, 2011, 20:56
Sony's PlayStation 3 has been a tough nut for hackers to crack.

Generally, this generation's consoles have been as about as sturdy as a block of Country Life butter sitting in a bowl of hot water, but, unlike its younger brother the PSP - which can now play everything from Amiga to Nintendo DS games - the PS3 has put up a strong fight.


But despite its valiant efforts hackers have chipped away at it and it seems the PS3's pirate free shores are about to suffer a multi-fleet invasion.

After a group of hackers created what they called the 'PSJailbreak' Sony quickly responded by implementing and firmware update addressing the issue and unleashing its crack legal commando unit to put the kibosh on any retailers selling the pesky USB stick.

That was just the calm before the storm though; prolific hacker George 'Geohot' Hotz has since blown the system wide open by decrypting the root key and making it freely available online. The question is, how much will this hurt Sony and the PS3?

Piracy has been the monkey on Sony's back ever since it stepped into the home console business. Every console since the original PlayStation has been a victim, with the PlayStation 2 notoriously popular among pirates. But times have changed.

Pirating PS2 games was simple enough that everyone and his kid brother could do it, whether it was installing a modchip or using a slide card and boot disc, all it took was an hour and a PC.

However, the complexities of the PS3's architecture and media format will likely prevent the propagation of piracy reaching the same heights as the PS2's.

Given the console's 'connected' nature, it's likely that Sony will release regular patches to combat pirates, even if they can't fix the core issue, we're betting they'll make it as hard as possible for people to continue downloading games.

Putting up roadblocks at every new corner is a tactic that seems to have proven quite successful for Microsoft, which regularly banned modded consoles, bolstered its Xbox Live feature offerings and locked miscreants out of these online features.

Most PS3 owners are heavily involved with their consoles on a service level, using features such as iPlayer, VidZone and the PlayStation Store for their media consumption. Would they sacrifice these services by modding their machine?

Uncharted developer Naughty Dog has said that it just about squeezed Uncharted 2 onto a Blu-Ray disc, that's around 25 gigabytes worth of data, does anyone really have the time, patience and more importantly the appropriate internet connection to download a file of that size as well as burn it onto a Blu-Ray disc?

But what do you lot think? Will the emergence of this PS3 Jailbreak have an impact on Sony and its console? If so to what extent and what do you think Sony will do to address the issue?

http://www.computerandvideogames.com/article.php?id=282709?cid=OTC-RSS&attr=CVG-General-RSS

Fonixx
January 10th, 2011, 00:13
If Sony keeps their standard approach of just whining about piracy and blaming everyone else then it will hit them hard. So it's up to them to take some cues from Nintendo, Apple and to a lesser extent MS with Kinect and offer something new people are willing to pay for. But i doubt that's gonna happen because through the whole history of Playstation i've never seen them do anything more than the absolute minimum, except for the hardware which they do happily throw all the latest tech at, but that's just a 1 time deal when they develop the consoles.

mattmayatt
January 10th, 2011, 00:44
If i had a hacked PS3 i wouldnt bother downloading the iso of the net and then burning to a blank blu ray disc, just hire original game from Block Buster then backup entire disc to the PS3 HDD.

Also to be fair if you have a fairly fast connection and are using usenet then 25gigs aint all that much.

Herbster
January 10th, 2011, 14:18
I think it depends on the market place. Being able to jailbreak and then copy games is still a technical procedure that most people will keep clear of.

As far as I know, so far the only way to run a backup on a PS3 is from a hard drive. The problem of piracy will escalate when it is commercialised and one can go to a car boot sale and come away with a bluray backup with a colour photocopy cover. That's when people will choose piracy over legit software. That's what happened with the ps1 and ps2.

As for me, I bought a second ps3 just for homebrew, it hasn't happened yet but I think I may soon be able to retire my old xbox. So Sony haven't done too badly out of me.