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'Anonymous' Plans Sony Boycott On April 16

Here's an excerpt from PCMag: "Say you're a hacker trying to cripple a major electronics company for suing its own users: how do you launch a cyberattack without harming the people you're trying to protect? In the case of hactivist group 'Anonymous,' which has spent the week targeting Sony to retaliate against Sony's ongoing lawsuits against PlayStation 3 modifiers, you take it offline. Anonymous is staging a 24-hour, in-store boycott at Sony stores around the world on Saturday, April 16. So far over 1,000 people have RSVP'd through Facebook."

8 of 260 comments (clear)

  1. Boycotts are legal by erroneus · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I'm still not going to sign anything associated with "anonymous." That's just asking for trouble. But before anonymous started making headlines, I have been vehemently against Sony and its products and my history shows it. I just hope this boycott catches on. Sony needs to be taken down a notch.

    Damn you brainless consumers!! Don't you know that Sony is bad?

    1. Re:Boycotts are legal by MikeBabcock · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Not to mention that nobody else is producing consoles that were purposely possible to hack around on using Linux.

      OtherOS was disabled shortly after GeoHot posted on his blog that he'd used OtherOS to figure out a way to bypass the system protection.

      Which is evil? Microsoft and Nintendo for making a heavily restricted console that never came with Linux, or Sony for offering it then taking it away when it was abused? Last I checked, I bought a PS3 specifically to support Sony for being so open minded on the PS2 and PS3 as to include Linux support at all. Also for not restricting which USB devices or hard drives I use with their products and sticking to open standards instead.

      Do people even do their research anymore? No. They just all jump on a stupid band wagon like somehow Sony Music == SCEA. Just a hint: the PS3 *allows* the ripping of CDs to non copy protected files. They're totally different divisions.

      --
      - Michael T. Babcock (Yes, I blog)
  2. Re:If they're going to hit the employees by rtfa-troll · · Score: 5, Interesting

    And you're going to 'block sales' without trespassing or obstructing traffic how exactly?

    'cmon. Has everybody forgotten how to protest. If the protesters want to get away with it there are so many ways this can be done. Wait until other customers start to arrive in the store. Go into the store (together with more friends than there are assistants). Pretend to be a customer. Demand attention then ask long and annoying but plausible questions about something expensive best of all if it's something you really do want to buy somewhere else. Act unsure; keep all the assistants busy. Then give up. Walk to a different part of the store. Repeat. Alternatively stand outside and be loud. Most customers won't come. Alternatively come in the same colour as the shop assistants. If asked give misleading advice, especially to go to the store round the corner.

    Anyway you probably don't care too much about being charged with trespassing. That's the whole point of civil disobedience.

    You know, I hope you people who do these things don't object when right wing wackos boycott Ford for 'promoting' homosexuality or anything..

    Of course I object; to the homophobia. I don't care about the fact of the boycott if it wasn't for such a bad reason.

    P.S. The best way to boycott Sony is not buying their stuff. Buy a Wii instead. That's what I do. I won't be turning up in a Sony store tomorrow because I haven't cared about Sony for years.

    --
    =~ s,(.*),<sarcasm>$1</sarcasm>,g if any_point_you_wish();
  3. Sony? by Sj0 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    This may be a silly question, but who still buys Sony anyway?

    They're constantly trying to shove their expensive, non-standard shit down everyone's throat, leaving you with devices whose removable memory costs several times more than the standards everyone else uses.

    I understand that the Playstation 3 has some great games, but why support a company that's consistently more interested in building an empire than working with its customers?

    --
    It's been a long time.
  4. Re:If they're going to hit the employees by WillDraven · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Alternatively come in the same colour as the shop assistants. If asked give misleading advice, especially to go to the store round the corner.

    Even better, give them brutally honest advice and history lessons. Tell them about the rootkits, the disabling of features on customers devices, the lawsuits, and anything else screwed up that Sony has done to their customers. It would be nice to have some pamphlets made up with all the sordid details (or at least an overview and a URL to find the details) to hand out.

    --
    This is my sig. There are many like it but this one is mine.
  5. Re:i've been boycotting before anonymous... by malkavian · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Would this, by any chance, be the same DMCA that's been decried from the very start as a Corporate lobbied removal of existing liberties?
    My, I think it just might.
    GeoHot happened to disagree that a corporation has the right to dictate what you can or can't do with an item you've purchased, so he worked out how to do whathe wanted on his own machine.
    Now, he distributes that knowledge to a variety of people who are interested in doing the same. Personally, I'd love the ability to have the 'Other OS' functionality back on my PS3. I put my money where my mouth was in supporting the idea that it should be there (I hadn't really been much interested in purchasing a console, but I liked that a corporation would open up a console for the home brew/enthusiast crowd; the very same ideals I had when I was a kid/teenager in the 70s and 80s), and thought 'hell, I can play a game or two on it to justify the spend, and it'll be good to reward a company for even attempting to do something slightly enlightened in this age of trying to lock everything down and out. More than anything, I think I was disappointed in Sony execs. It was a dishonourable thing to do (strike a deal, then renege on it). Western companies, sure I can see them doing just that, but acting with dishonour in the Japanese culture?
    Wow.
    Still, I find your argument that we should all cheer on Sony because they choose to charge someone under an unethical law for attempting to regain his side of a deal that was struck at the point of payment to be a little naive.
    I bought the console simply because it gave me options to do A and B.
    After I buy, the company decide that now they only want me to do B. I can do A if I want, but they'll prevent me doing B for as long as I choose to do A.
    Should I ever choose to do B, then I can never do A.
    Someone works out a way to do A and B again, and the company immediately drag them to court.
    Personally, I'd cheer anyone on who attempts to get me my original deal back again. GeoHot did that. So I applaud him for it. Yes, he's in court for his own actions, but that doesn't mean I'm on Sony's side in this; I find their dealings with me to be dishonourable. I consider the DMCA to be unethical.
    Really, the USA has fallen a long way, and I somewhat suspect the idealists who started the American war of Independence would be spinning in their graves.
    There was an unfair levy placed, and a stripping of liberty on the country, so they threw a whole load of tea into a harbour, and were remembered for centuries as heroes who started a rebellion. I'm a Brit, and I'm pretty much an "establishment" person. I'm still behind the guys who did this all the way.
    I wasn't behind the DDOS and compromising of companies. I am behind the peaceful civil unrest of people turning round and saying "this is unjust", and spreading the message. I'm pondering taking part myself, and calmly explaining to people that anything they buy on features could suffer exactly the same fate, and that the company now has an established track record for dishonouring their point of sale promise of functionality.
    Personally, I really hope the media takes this and runs with it. It'll be interesting to see how much of a PR hit Sony takes with this one, and how it starts to affect sales at time of austerity, where everyone wants to be able to rely on their vendor.
    No, I don't want to see Sony fail. But I want them to understand that actions have consequences, and their action in removing the original deal has a price. And I'd really like them to understand that this may be a price that in future they'll know they don't want to pay.
    Ah for an idea world. I suspect it won't hurt them that much, and they'll carry on, knowing they can renege on any deal with impunity. We, as customers, cannot.
    What a lovely world us mere mortals live in 'eh? Where's that representation when you need it?

  6. Re:Anonymous is Anonymous? by zill · · Score: 1, Interesting

    They can get kicked out of the store, but they can't be arrested for trespassing. The "Open for business" sign in front of the store means the store is inviting the public to enter. It's not trespassing if you have been invited.

  7. Re:Anonymous is Anonymous? by nomadic · · Score: 3, Interesting

    It is if you've been asked to leave.