PS3 Hacker Claims He's Jailbroken 3.60 Firmware
Wesociety writes "Not one week ago Sony released a new PlayStation 3 firmware update which implemented cloud-saving for its PlayStation Plus subscribers and featured some understandably secretive behind-the-scenes security features meant to prevent future hacking. Today, a hacker is purporting that he broke firmware 3.60 and posted a video to prove it."
The more you increase your security to keep hackers out, the more feverishly they'll work to take down what they see as a challenge.
According to Mathieulh, Sony is smart: they're let you log into PSN if you are using the old authentification method from 3.55... and flag you as a thief. http://twitter.com/#!/Mathieulh
Is Sony going to come after me for reading TFA? Do we now need to start incorporating "Caution: Reading the following article may result in you being sued to the ends of the earth" logos over the top of stories?
Someone spotted the fact that his debug loader properly connected to a PC, apparently something that retail PS3s, no matter how hacked they are, can't do. So for the moment, looking like a fake; basically a debug unit on the latest debug firmware.
As a PS3 owner, I am getting a bit tired of all the jail-breaking. I get that people want to mess around with the hardware, but almost none of this work goes towards something new and useful. I've yet to see any work on some killer applications or games the PS3. I went through the same stuff with the Wii. Everybody talking about the great homebrew scene was but there was barely anything more than emulators. Sure, there were a few new games, but they weren't anything that fantastic. Then, Nintendo felt it necessary to update the bootloader for the Wii, bricking people's unhacked consoles. The PS3 isn't looking much different. All of this talk about being free to do what you want with the console, but people end up just getting their games for free. If you are going to hack the console, at least make it look like you are doing it for a worthwhile reason.
Disclaimer: I'm not a security expert by any means.
Every time I watch a recorded talk on security I spot the same aim they set them self: Allow two parties to communicate securely, where secure means that a 3rd party can't tap or alter data. This fundamental idea to make this work is that there is a secret that the 3rd party doesn't know. These talks also always assume that the attacker doesn't have physical access to one of the parties.
And that seems to be the fundamental flaw with DRM in physical devices: One does have physical access to them.
vote with your wallet.
Does this mean you can jailbreak a PS3 that is on stock 3.60 or is this just a custom firmware based on 3.60 that you can install from one of the earlier jailbreakable versions?
He's running a dev unit. 3.60 has not been jailbroken. This was non-news when this video surfaced two days ago because it was debunked mere hours later. Glad to see Slashdot posting articles in a timely fashion.
I'm tired of the constant updates from Sony that have no benefit or effect upon me using my PS3. I'm ok with them trying to stop someone from jail-breaking the system but the lousy download speeds from their server really make it kind of inconvenient. A 176MB download at 50-100/kbs? Come on, seriously?
I brought home a game yesterday only to find that they wanted me to sit around and update the firmware AND the game. I updated neither and guess what? The beasties suffered from my holy wrath all the same! Of course, I cannot gloat by sharing my trophies with the world but, then again, I kind of like being an unsung hero.
Amen.
I game fairly infrequently, but it seems lately that every time I turn my machine on to play a quick game of something simple (currently plants vs. zombies) I have to wait an hour while it pulls some update (which probably provides no new functionality and is purely to screw with modders) from their disturbingly slow servers.
vote with your wallet.
By the numbers:
49 million consoles sold. 69 million PSN accounts. 17 million PlayStation Home social networking accounts. 4 million MOVE controllers.
The PS3 Fat has been out of production for almost three years.
Each new video game sold , Blu-Ray video, MOVE contoller or online service like Netflix is a vote for the firmware upgrade.
Of course the geek can still vote with his wallet.
But so can everyone browsing the latest in HDTV, home video and console gaming at Walmart.
Wouldn't it be as simple as having the new firmware only allow whitelisted apps using the old signing key, and whitelisting all apps that were licensed to use said key? Admittedly, that just moves the problem to "how do I fake being $SOFTWARE well enough to bypass the check", but still...
Given that GeoHot published the master key for the world to see, aren't any new security measures essentially useless? Don't all future firmwares and consoles need to honor code signed with that key or risk incompatibility with all old games and content?
No, any new security measures tied to the master key are essentially useless; intead they're playing the DirecTV game and analysing the rest of the system. Essentially, they're blocking any consoles that have a means of messing with the master key verification due to ffirmware or hardware mods from operating on the network.
After all, it doesn't really matter that we all know the master key; what matters is whether we can actually use that key in any meaningful way.
you cannot get sued by sony if you don't buy a ps3
You can't? Since when?
If I can be modded down for being a troll, can I be modded up for being an orc, or a balrog?