Sony Releases PS3 3.61 Update Ahead of PSN's Imminent Return
Sonny Yatsen writes "Sony has released the PS3 3.61 firmware update as a part of the phased return of the Playstation Network and Qriocity. The new update now requires all PSN users to change their passwords in order to sign back into the PSN service." And several readers are pointing to reports that the network is slowly being spun up. Snips one anonymous submitter: "Sony Japan told customers today that it would begin phased restoration of its services of its beleaguered Playstation Network which has been suffering from an outage for nearly a month. The company would start bringing back its gaming network this Sunday, on a country-by-country basis, and expects it to be completed by May 31."
There are reports today that Sony's networks still are oblivious to real security. Among the serious vulnerabilities are links to globally viewable security consoles in robots.txt files, ID web-management consoles being publicly available and indexed in Google, and more!
I guess the upside is that if the hackers are going to get your credit card from Sony, they already have it so you may as well play your games too.
Help stamp out iliturcy.
My PS3 has a different BIOS, that starts-up as a prompt "GRUB:"
Anyone help me out if this will work in my PS3 emulator?
You can sign in and change you password now if you live in the northeast. Only thing up now is online games.
Common its Saturday night, whats the likelihood it get bombarded?
Ride recklessly only when safe to do so.
Well, not actually a schedule, but you can see when your state is back online :
Playstation Blog
I have a completely random password that even I don't even know. The password is saved in my PS3 somewhere.
How is it going to help anything if I change the password? Sony could just re-hash with a different salt the next time I login.
Seems a big failure on design. If I designed a credit card payment system I would have it only be active in the portion of the network that required people to pay for something.
So... your playstation comes online and you want to sign in and play a game. Ok, the console has been authorized before it should be able to send a token saying "I'm whois let me play games."
In fact, PSN shouldn't really care who you are unless you're trying to buy something. Buying something and playing a game are two fundamentally different things. Your credit card should probably not be linked to the same username that you use for web browsing. There should be two accounts or two privilege levels that require different types of sign-on.
Why does the PSN network care who you are until you buy something? The entire store should still be online and all free downloads available, just no payed downloads until they fix that part. You should be able to play Black Ops without risking your financial future right?
You might say the customer wouldn't put up with the bullshit of having two accounts, or everyone will use the same password twice but:
1. If you explain how it works some people will do the right thing and be protected.
2. We've already put up with crazy amounts of bullshit, like weekly system updates that can't be backgrounded and take forever. Loss of features some people specifically payed for (ps2 compatibility, running Linux), and just a bad UI that can't do simple things like play your mp3 collection while you game or browse the store.
Can't wait for PSN to be back up. Waiting has been like watching water boil. I have been doing all kinds of stupid things in the meantime. Like swimming, learning to play guitar, and spending money. I can't wait for my cheap, relaxing hobby to be fully back. Who cares about all the drama. I hope Sony all the best so I can get back to using my stuff. Let the haters hate somewhere else for awhile.
Slowly I turn, step by step, inch by inch. How many people are going to change their password to SONYSUCKS?
I am not in favor of the innocent users becoming victims, but if this happened to any company, at least it happened to Sony. There are few companies that deserve this more than Sony.
You got to love arm chair systems architects. Every thing is easy peasy and obvious. Simple answer is:....
Management has no idea how things work. So they turn everything off at once during a breach. And turn everything back on in small steps with tons of testing along the way. It is a best practice as old as computing.
Maybe *you* don't know your password, but there is a good chance that the attackers can crack their copy of the hash and know your password. Resalting does precisely nothing because the danger is the attackers getting your password, and once they have that, any salt you apply will make no difference.
XML is like violence. If it doesn't solve the problem, use more.
In fact, PSN shouldn't really care who you are unless you're trying to buy something.
Or unlocking Trophies, or listening if you're receiving messages from other players, or setting the status of what game you're playing, or to check whether or not you've got game invites periodically...
Oh, wait...
Non impediti ratione cogitationus.
Sony's SOE games (the MMOs, such as EverQuest) have been down for 2 weeks. They brought them back online earlier today.
-- A change is as good as a reboot.
What I'm curious about is why do they re-activate the network per state.
As of right now, just California and a few New England states seem to be "online". One server per state? Sounds a bit odd.
Oh and the map is stored on Flickr. For a moment there I thought someone hacked their blog system too, and just posted faked-up "we're about to go live again" message.
Hyperom.com
Imagine the butthurt of nerds everywhere if the Cheetos supply ran out.
Microsoft has done more to damage computing and freedom than Sony ever has and even they don't deserve this. No one deserves this kind of break in and head ache.
Seriously.
Fuck you.
Yes, I'm a PS3 fanboy, but that's because my ps3 doesn't check my controllers for a lock out chip, and they let devs be incredibly open development wise.
It's a bad time to be a PS3 fanboy, I'll admit, but, given the alternatives? Microsoft is really evil and Nintendo just doesn't have the games I want to play. PCs still suck for gaming. Bad time for gaming over all.
Can't it be the Dreamcast era again?
Non impediti ratione cogitationus.
1) Do not offer Linux.
2) Spend more money on security.
3) Have a simpler system with fewer features
4) Lie about security breaches. Never tell the customer they happen.
All of which should be optional, not forced.
Your grasping at straws. This didn't happen because someone was seeking revenge. Thats like saying American went to war with Iraq over weapons of mass destruction. failoverflow hacked the PS3 because they were done hacking the Wii. George Hotz hacked the PS3 because he was done hacking IPhones. Anonymous attacked Sony for the lolz. Breaking these systems is their hobby. They would have done it eventually regardless of what Sony did.
I bought every Sony game system on release day including the PS3. After all of the crap they have pulled, I will never own another Sony product. My PS3 is now exclusively relegated to Blu-Ray player, and even at that sometimes it hangs while trying to figure out all of the updated DRM junk they build in to those disks. I also have an Xbox 360 and gaming desktop, and thats where I will stay for gaming. Sony's incompetent management has made mistake after mistake, shafting their customers at every turn. The best thing that could happen for Sony is a class action lawsuit that would force them to split into two companies, one a content provider and the other a hardware manufacturer. All of this customer abuse got started when they got into content ownership.
When I worked for a spook house, the network was very nice. And not in any way connected to the internet. And there were people with sticks and bricks and bats (oh and carbines too, not pistols but rifles), that made sure that no "company" data got anywhere near the live internet. Its not that there wasn't at least one internet connection per office, its just that there was a locked door, and you needed to ask to go in, and blank media went in, and unblank media came out. It was like a diode. If you wanted the latest source code to something off the net, no problem. It was all one way. Radios, cell phones, televisions, scanners and any other device you can think of wouldn't work in there either. People streamed music over the lan for others to listen to. At any given moment, there were 4 or 5 different streams people could listen to over the computer. But it was cds brought in (past the full scrutiny of security), and played locally, and listened to locally. I also worked for a 911 call dispatch center. Some people there wanted a live internet connection right on the 911 workstations. You can only protest against a group for so long. It went in. When viruses caused serious problems (very directly related to lifesaving), everyone agreed that it had to go (and it did, and no complained again, and it only took a week to go from live to gone). Money isn't life and death, but sometimes its close. Credit card info should be stored on a separate system from the net, or at least dispatched from a secure site to the rest of the PSN. Sony has been good in electronics (although their use of proprietary formats makes you never want to buy from them again), but their computer products have been sucking for quite some time. I don't want or accept any data from them. I updated my PS3 up to when I heard about otheros going away, and my updates stopped. I've never been on PSN (and don't intend to). Mostly I use my PS3 as a media player: DVD/Blu-Ray, MP3, and as a dlna receiver.
Sony should apologize and return Other OS functionality. I think this will please most 'hackers'. I would be happy because then I could actually update my PS3 and use PSN again. I have been without PSN access since they removed the functionality.
Which of those activities has anyone ever been forced to do?
Seems a big failure on design. If I designed a credit card payment system I would have it only be active in the portion of the network that required people to pay for something.
So... your playstation comes online and you want to sign in and play a game. Ok, the console has been authorized before it should be able to send a token saying "I'm whois let me play games."
In fact, PSN shouldn't really care who you are unless you're trying to buy something. Buying something and playing a game are two fundamentally different things. Your credit card should probably not be linked to the same username that you use for web browsing. There should be two accounts or two privilege levels that require different types of sign-on.
Why does the PSN network care who you are until you buy something? The entire store should still be online and all free downloads available, just no payed downloads until they fix that part. You should be able to play Black Ops without risking your financial future right?
You might say the customer wouldn't put up with the bullshit of having two accounts, or everyone will use the same password twice but:
1. If you explain how it works some people will do the right thing and be protected.
2. We've already put up with crazy amounts of bullshit, like weekly system updates that can't be backgrounded and take forever. Loss of features some people specifically payed for (ps2 compatibility, running Linux), and just a bad UI that can't do simple things like play your mp3 collection while you game or browse the store.
interesting things,you can revere something go-to :http://www.globality-finance.com
Has it actually been confirmed (by Visa, Mastercard, or Sony) that credit card numbers were stolen? Not just anecdotes -- we'd expect a few of the millions of PSN customers to be victims of ID theft anyway.
Visit the
So, the PSN cloud failed for a month. It has made me rethink my enthusiasm for Google's ChromeOS. With my fat-desktop I can still do useful things with it without a network. With ChromeOS I'm not sure I can do anything if the network is disrupted. And initially, I was like: "Awesome! Want!" when Google announce ChromeOS..
Shh.
I think that Sony has lost a huge amount of psn customers. And also gaming networks did.
Maybe Computers will never be as intelligent as Humans.
For sure they won't ever become so stupid. [VR-1988]
EQ2 servers came up about 5pm PDT today.
Be seeing you...
Which of those activities has anyone ever been forced to do?
In western civilization, ~2011, making something attractive is the same as forcing someone.
Jesus was all right but his disciples were thick and ordinary. -John Lennon
I think he meant who you ACTUALLY are, not your screen name.
All of them are if you wish to keep your account. They force you to do all of those things whilst also making entering your credit card number mandatory. Absolutely sickening.
No joy for PSP or PSPGo (who really need it) owners: http://psp2roundup.blogspot.com/2011/05/psn-coming-back-up-no-joy-for-psp.html
What are you talking about? I have a PSN account and never entered a credit card number anywhere. Furthermore, you can log off PSN anytime you want, and keep playing, if for some reason you don't like trophies.
They removed the ability to play PS2 games, and the ability to boot OtherOS.
What this time?
The ability to plug in controllers?
The ability to play sounds?
The ability to do hi-def?
Each update seems to be a slow descent into brickdom.
Fuck!!! It's a Sony!!!
These posts express my own personal views, not those of my employer
http://www.soe.com/securityupdate/pressrelease.vm While this was for Sony Online Entertainment; its fairly safe to assume that PSN, which was the target in the attack - was hit harder.
My son and i did the login/password change. This went smoothly and my sons friends and trophy info properly restored. He has never been happier to be woken up at 5.30 on a sunday.
1. Sony Legal applies litigation (like some kung fu neck lock) to GeoHot
2. GeoHot rolls over, and works with Sony engineers.
3. Sony engineers determine how to detect any modified console running on their network.
4. Sony engineers explain to Sony corporate that we can kick all modified consoles off the network, but a large change would have to be made, keeping the network down for a number of weeks.
5. Sony corporate tells Sony PR to spin together a story about how were hacked, that the network is going down.
6. Sony PR blames Anonymous.
7. Sony PR tells Sony finance that to get the proper spin on the hacker story, we will have to provide fake damage control, aka credit protection.
8. "Sony Releases PS3 3.61 Update Ahead of PSN's Imminent Return"
9. PS3 3.61 update detects modified consoles, banning thousands of consoles from PSN.
10. Sony CEO looks up from ACME drawing board, and smiles (and does that eyebrow thing.)
Isn't that the word that was traditionally used to refer to Apple?
#naabhaprzrag, #sverubfr-000, #agi-fcbafberq, negvpyr[pynff*=' negvpyr-ary-'] { qvfcynl: abar !vzcbegnag; }
Japan? US? Europe? UK? South America? Africa?
That's good, because he's not a troll. He's posting his opinion, as valid as any I have seen here. His delivery is arguably offensive (which would justify a flamebait mod), but it's far from the most offensive +5 post I've seen here. He should not be modded down.
Remember mods, you can't have a real discussion without an opposing side!
You know, there is a difference between trolling and pointing out the flaws in your reasoning. Just saying.
It makes the most sense from a technical perspective also. If someone hacks into your home network, you won't just shut down your 1 file server. You will, hopefully, pull the cable between your cable modem and your internet router and THEN proceed to checking access logs on your router and all of your computers.
Sony did it right unless they were just lying about taking PSN down due to a hacking as opposed to scheduled maintenance that would take much longer than initially expected.*********
They have make sure the system is slower especially all things PSN related.
In addition they now ask your password for every action in Account Management (may be they forgot that PS3 sits in the living room and all your family can watch you entering your parent's password over and over).
The cherry on top is the billing Information that drives an error now.
So I cannot change/review the information that was stolen from me and I'm supposed to be much more assured now that Sony takes my information seriously?
Those guys are a bunch of morons and for myself (aster PS1, PS2, 2 PS3, 4 PSP) it's over. Bye, Bye Sony.
I've lost my patience with all the forced firmware upgrades, so I'm just not signing back on to the Playstation Network. All of my PS3 games are single player, which I've been able to play during the outage, so I'm just fine with never signing on to the PSN again. Aside from single player games, the only other use I have for a console nowadays is Netflix.
Essentially, the Playstation Network has nothing of value to me.
How should I put this? It's not putting lipstick on a pig that's a problem, although it's frowned upon. Quite frankly, a lot of people want to be deceived so that they don't feel responsible for the choices they make. Take just about any sexual relationship for example.
It's the social manipulation and coercion where it becomes a problem. Shit like turning anyone that reveals the truth into some kind of criminal or social reject. Making the purchase of the item or service a legal or social requirement, or at least making alternatives illegal, even if it will not be utilized. You know, like having soldiers go around and harass people that collect rainwater, because the local privately owned water utility wants to gouge to the fullest. Or, for a more western version, adding taxes to media so that content middle men still get free money even if it's just a garage band selling CD-Rs to local fans or a business that produced it's own ambient music being forced via the legal system to buy a license to play it from a competitor.
Etc...
Being hit with an "Ooh! Shiney!"-"Daddy like!" is not so much of a problem unless there is more going on. See the sig...
Any sufficiently advanced influence is indistinguishable from control.
and for fuck's sakes, don't give them your credit card # kthnxbai
and it's not as if there's some sort of way you could relate information across various databases, in some sort of relational fashion that would make his complaint somehow completely baseless.
Oh wait...
Non impediti ratione cogitationus.
You aren't "forced" to do anything you "wish" to do. Kinda by definition.
Does free will exist?
Jesus was all right but his disciples were thick and ordinary. -John Lennon
In fact, PSN shouldn't really care who you are unless you're trying to buy something.
That is so true. It is very easy to setup multiple PSN accounts. The only thing you really need is to have a "valid?" email account and that email account is only useful if you have forgotten your password or people want to send you messages.
There ain't no such thing as proprietary standards only proprietary formats. Standards are by definition open.
and the funny thing is that now you can only create sub-accounts (for kids) with MANDATORY credit-card information. uh-oh, Sony, do you really think that this time we'll give that to you?
We can be pretty confident at this point that whatever Sony does is not any kind of best practice.
Never attribute to competence any Sony behavior which can be adequately explained by utter idiocy and/or malice.
Fate and free-will are not two separate entities, but rather to aspects of the same mechanism. Fate is something you have, something you are a part of, your will, for the small part it plays in the grand skein of things, helps guide the weave of fate. I guess you could say that I look at it as kind of like the difference between uncertainty of Quantum Physics and the steady predictability of Newtonian Physics.
Any sufficiently advanced influence is indistinguishable from control.