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Xbox To Use Region-Locked Peripherals

Cutriss writes "This newspost over at National Console Supply Exchange seems to leave all the potential Xbox controller-importers in the dust. Apparently the US Xbox will only allow peripherals with a specific USB ID to connect to the console, thus locking out the use of Japanese controllers, which will have different USB IDs." Update this doesn't mean all peripherals will be region encoded. Apparently Joypads will work on both sides of the pond.

6 of 336 comments (clear)

  1. Perhaps I labor under a misapprehension... by M-2 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    but is there a SANE reason for not allowing the use of these imported controllers?

    Other than "A Machine We Control Totally", that is.

    Is there some kind of incredible controller for the Xbox that is only available in Japan (as the original response controllers for the PSX were)? So that Microsoft doesn't want people to have them because of some other kind of interesting occurance? And how long until someone either finds a way to change the USB ID in the controller firmware, or an enterprising company decides to make their own US-based USB ID controllers that match a local controller that isn't USian? Fairly soon, I would guess.

  2. XBOX != PC by Amarok.Org · · Score: 4, Interesting

    The XBOX is a game *console*. It's perfectly reasonable to maintain a closed standard. What MS is trying to do is make sure they get their licensing fees from "official" peripheral manufacturers, instead of having their profits dried up by cheap Taiwanese knockoffs.

    When another company does things to try and protect their market share, it's reasonable. When Microsoft does it, it's inherently evil. Remember, Microsoft does *NOT* have a monopoly on the console market, and has to claw it's way into contention.

    I'm not a Microsoft fan by any means (MacOS, MacOS X, and Linux all run my household servers/desktops), but I do own an XBox.

    --
    -- "Other than that, how was the play Mrs. Lincoln?"
    1. Re:XBOX != PC by bnenning · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Bingo. This perfectly illustrates the fundamental unfairness of the DMCA and similar abusive laws. Vendors are allowed to use technology to impose restraints above and beyond what copyright provides for, while users are forbidden from using technology to remove those restraints. In a real free market, any attempt at market segmentation via region coding would swiftly fail; yet the US and other governments have deemed it necessary to use their guns to prop up otherwise unworkable business models.

      --
      How to solve most of our problems: 1.Lots of nuclear plants. 2.Cure aging.
  3. Re:US only USB IDs by pclminion · · Score: 3, Interesting
    It could be even easier, I think. Couldn't you just build a little widget that sits between the controller and the X-Box that rewrites the USB ID on each packet that goes through? Such a device could be mass-produced for pennies...

    Any people who are more familiar with USB than I am? Is this a feasible idea?

  4. The headline shows the real reason to worry by syzxys · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Xbox To Use Region-Locked Peripherals

    True, maybe the Japanese controllers will work with the MS consoles, but we need to look beyond the immediate future here.

    Hmm, let's think here...

    1. MS (rumored to be) using region locking, *in the context of*
    2. the well-known DVD region fiasco, equals...

    Well, at any rate, it sure makes me nervous. Think about when they start selling region-locked Ethernet, or region locked hard drives, etc. add-ons for the Xbox. Region locking in general is a way for large companies to restrain trade contrary to international agreements. It was never a problem before recently because either (a) nobody thought of it (doubtful) or (b) the technological means to do it weren't around until recently.

    DVD's have recently proven (in some people's minds, anyway) that "consumers" (if we're all consumers, who the hell is producing, btw?) will put up with this region locking restraint of trade nonsense. And it's a well known fact that the courts are so far behind in their understanding of technology that they won't figure out what's going on until nobody even remembers the way things used to be. I mean, "Microsoft" and "restraint of trade" -- who would have ever thought of those two words in the same sentence? :-) IOW, this doesn't surprise me in the least.

    At least I know which gaming console I won't be buying anytime soon, though! :-)

    ---
    Have you crashed Windows XP with a simple printf recently? Try it!
  5. Re:So? by Steveftoth · · Score: 3, Interesting

    The PS doesn't allow you to play any game that is not Sony approved. All PS/PS2 games have a special boot system that only Sony can put on a disc. FYI, all PSX/PS2 games are made by Sony, at least the physical copy. As a game developer, you submit a final 'gold' version of your program and then Sony makes X copies of it for you and gives them back to you so you can sell it. AFAIK, you pay them up front for all the copies and if they don't sell then you lose the money. I know this is how the Big N does it as well.