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First PS3 Jailbreaker Arrested In South Africa

GusGous writes "South African newspaper Beeld reports that the first person known to be arrested for jailbreaking the Playstation 3 was arrested in Parktown, Johannesburg today. This raid was conducted by the South African Police Service's Commercial Crime Unit, after receiving criminal complaints from the South African Federation Against Copyright Theft (SAFACT). Members of the police were assisted by the South African Revenue Service (SARS) Computer Forensics Lab. The police confiscated goods of around R100 000 (14000 USD)." See also this story in Afrikaans; Google translation.

17 of 119 comments (clear)

  1. PS3 jailbreaking by zget · · Score: 5, Informative
    Ah, such an over sensationalist title and summary again. It makes it sound like the person was arrested for merely jailbreaking PS3. He was a Pakistani man who was copying and selling those copied games and jailbreaking devices.

    Various state of the art computers, circumvention software packages, jailbreak USB devices, PS3 consoles as well as hard-drives were seized during the raid. In addition documentation, fake PS2 games and original PS3 games, believed to be employed as master copies, were also seized.

    Information is received about a man who in Parktown Jailbreak software loaded on consoles and games sold stolen.

    Slashdot at its best.

    1. Re:PS3 jailbreaking by gearloos · · Score: 3, Funny

      LOL. Timmay!

      --
      "Computers are a lot like Air Conditioners" "They both work great until you start opening Windows"
    2. Re:PS3 jailbreaking by gman003 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Well, when it said they confiscated $14,000 worth of stuff, you can easily deduce that he was jailbreaking at an industrial scale, not a personal one. And honestly, raids against people doing that sort of thing is pretty justifiable.

    3. Re:PS3 jailbreaking by westlake · · Score: 2

      Ah, such an over sensationalist title and summary again.

      It happens whenever a geek is arrested for a white-collar crime. Apparently, the police are supposed to look the other way.

    4. Re:PS3 jailbreaking by NoNonAlphaCharsHere · · Score: 2
      In all fairness, it IS a google-translate story:

      "This rewrites the PS3's internal veiligheidsprotokols. Stolen games than the PS3's hard drive copied. "

      Allers says it is for people who do not take, original games that would pay Jail-break on their consoles loading.

      So, "LOL WUT"s all around.

    5. Re:PS3 jailbreaking by sortius_nod · · Score: 2, Funny

      hahahaha

      TIMMEH!!!!

    6. Re:PS3 jailbreaking by AK+Marc · · Score: 2

      Lifestyle is about choice. If you pick Big Mac over ramen and a ham radio kit, then you aren't a nerd. A nerd will hoard. A nerd will gather scrap. I had $50,000 in computer equipment gathered from a job with a local megacorp that paid nothing. It was an inventory job where the trash was disposed of into my car (with permisssion). That's how nerds operate. They don't live within their means barely without amassing items of interest. If they do, they aren't nerds. I worked nights for a month as a security guard (yes, such a nerd that the people who saw me in uniform unifomily laughed at a nerd guard). I earned enough for a decent stereoA/V setup. That's what nerds do. They don't sit around wishing they had more money for the latest gadget and no doing anything about it but getting on slashdot and defending lazy nerds everywhere.

    7. Re:PS3 jailbreaking by Aeiri · · Score: 2

      I can't believe someone actually said "if you don't have this much money, you aren't a nerd". A $50 toaster running BSD is enough to disprove that.

    8. Re:PS3 jailbreaking by Opportunist · · Score: 2

      Mmmm... profiting from someone else's work is a crime in my eyes. I just wish it would apply to more than just selling material copyrighted by someone else. But I guess, then a lot of wealthy people would be locked behind bars.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    9. Re:PS3 jailbreaking by Runaway1956 · · Score: 2

      Ahhhh, a bit of common sense. It's like a breath of cool, fresh air, in the middle of this hot muggy summer!

      "Copyright" law was never meant to enrich anyone. It was only meant to ensure that IF anyone made money off of a story, idea, or whatever, then the guy who thought of it FIRST should get a cut.

      Piracy for private use, I'm cool with. Industrial piracy? Burn the bastard.

      Now, if he could demonstrate that he had reached an agreement with the authors, and was submitting a percentage of his sales to the authors, THEN he would be cool. And, of course, the cops wouldn't be involved at all!

      --
      "Windows is like the faint smell of piss in a subway: it's there, and there's nothing you can do about it." - Charlie Br
  2. Who's at the door? by devnullkac · · Score: 2

    That's SAFACT, Jack!

    --
    What do you mean they cut the power? How can they cut the power, man? They're animals!
  3. Re:The war on information continues... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

    You know, originally when the printing press came out people were getting in trouble for printing the bible. http://www.greatsite.com/timeline-english-bible-history/

  4. Re:some perspective for you by zget · · Score: 3, Informative

    turn a blind eye to infringement of traffic laws

    For some reason (or maybe because I've lived in Asia, where traffic is chaotic but everyone seems to get by), I think that a guy making huge profit by selling pirated software is a little bit higher on the list than cops spending their time sitting on road.

    And even if you don't, these are different police organizations. Every time when someone pirating something gets arrested there's always someone saying that police should have priorities and should spend time on something else. These are not the same policemen. If they work on other crimes it's not off from from your casual everyday street police.

  5. Re:The war on information continues... by JockTroll · · Score: 2

    Forget luck. Unless action is taken, in 50 years we will look back and marvel at the idea that there was a time when information was NOT controlled.

    --
    Geeks are so full of shit that "beating the crap out of them" takes a whole new meaning.
  6. Question by msobkow · · Score: 4, Insightful

    What has theoretical freedom of ideas have to do with a full-scale commercial piracy operation?

    --
    I do not fail; I succeed at finding out what does not work.
    1. Re:Question by westlake · · Score: 3, Insightful

      What has theoretical freedom of ideas have to do with a full-scale commercial piracy operation?

      Nothing whatever.

      Which shows how impoverished and fraudulent these cries for "Freedom!" have become.

      P2P is the geek's middle class entitlement. Nothing more. The investment in tech and services required makes that plain. The AAA game demands AAA hardware.

      Playing the pirated HD video on the 60" screen doesn't make you a hero.

      It makes you a thief.

  7. As a South African by Mortimer82 · · Score: 3, Informative

    What the person was doing was illegal and deserves to be punished to the full extent of the law, as they were profiting off other people's work by copying it and then selling it.

    However, pirated media *thrives* in a place like South African because luxury goods like imported media is over priced for that economy.

    Although certain aspects of South Africa are 3rd world, all the major cities are pretty much first world, as someone presently living in Ireland, and having lived in France, I can tell you that for the middle class South African, their life style isn't radically different, but any luxury item is significantly more expensive relatively speaking.

    Salaries are based on the price of living, and in South Africa the price of living is considerably less than places like the the US or UK. To put it in perspective, as per 12 months ago (http://www.oanda.com/currency/big-mac-index), the price of a big mac in USD was $2.70 compared to it costing $3.73 is the US. The cost of living is very much like this, most day to day things cost less, consequently, salaries work the same way, you get paid a bit less in terms of USD, because your money goes further, however, anything luxury, is prices in USD and then converted into the local currency.

    So, relatively speaking, for our salaries, we pay a lot more for things like software, music CDs and movies. It's also not just luxury goods, business is also expensive, imagine your copy of Microsoft or Adobe software package always costing ~30% more? Thus it's hardly surprising to see so many people turn to cheaper, but illegal avenues.

    Copyright holders annoy me greatly because even though we have this global distribution medium called the internet which should really make borders disappear to all intents and purposes, you still get youtube blocking videos because "this content is not available in your region due to copyright issues" and Netflix can't be used outside the US, however, despite them locking down copyrighted work to regions, they still keep the price of the these works the same in all countries, regardless of economic differences. They then get surprised at the lack of loyalty from their "customers", however, in South African, they're more like "suckers".