Saturday, November 16, 2013

'Sony are not able to prevent Playstation 3 250gb pirates' - Entertainment

Speaking with GamesIndustry.biz, Walfisz - who was a vital player in developing Ubi's new DRM technologies - suggested that since playing pirated games doesn't demand a modchip, Sony will not be in a position to detect hacked consoles.

"If that hack works as reported, I can't assume that Sony can regain any control," said Walfisz.

"And considering that it seems that users won't even need a hardware mod-chip to try out pirated games, I don't assume that Sony can also detect which users to lock out from PSN."

Although he recognised how the platform holder could employ tactics akin to those employed by Microsoft, these would likely be ineffective since users could simply take their console offline.

"They could make an effort to use a similar system to Xbox Live, in order that people running hacked systems won't have accessibility to PSN. But Sony will not be competent to stop people from running pirated game copies given that the machines usually are not attached online."

Walfisz's bold statements stem through the idea that the PS3's core architecture has been completely showed to exploit loopholes from the hardware itself, thereby limiting particularly Sony are able to use to cope with the problems.

"They way the PS3(cheapest ps3 games) have been hacked, it is currently completely open. The hackers can make pirated copies that completely mimic the state Sony digital signature, defining it as extremely user-friendly and uncomplicated pirated copies of games, without necessity for just about any hardware chip modifications," explained Walfisz.

He started to say which he feels the PS3 could suffer piracy issues with a level much in excess of the PSP, which can be notorious as extremely mod-friendly.

"I would assume that pirated copies might be stored to the HDD also, defining it as simple to use that PS3(cheapest wii games) piracy, given time, might even surpass the handhelds."

The Ubi man suggested which the only means to fix this now could be to revise the PS3 hardware itself, which would be described as a costly process.

"I don't think that they'll do much. Every console is hacked this completely, the hardware manufacturer can't really do anything. They will maybe update their hardware achievable console sales, which may be described as a long and expensive process, but that wont stop users from running pirated copies for the current hardware.

"And updating the hardware needs to be done in wherein doesn't prevent users from running already-released games. I doubt that can be done."

A variety of PS3(buy ps3 games) hackers are facing legal action from Sony.





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