Considering PS2 probably sold more software in a single city in Europe then entire Asia (not counting Japan), I doubt anyone cares about those kind of "hotcake" hw sales.spyshagg said:- Now ps3 will really start to sell like hotcakes in europe/asia (like ps2)
pseudocaesar said:Not to bring up the piracy issue, this is actually a genuine query. What are the legalities of what that kid does? There is a wikipedia article on him for pete sake, and he openly admits to hacking the Iphone etc, and now the PS3? Where does he stand legally? Why would he be so brazen about his actions?
onken said:Yes because I'm sure if he was going to get in trouble he would publicly reveal his identity all over the Internet.
lowrider007 said:He just asked what the legalities were that is all, do you know what they are?
onken said:Why don't you read my post again and figure out its implications?
grap3fruitman said:What he said is true for running homebrew on any console and applies to not just video game consoles, but security everywhere. He was merely trying to dumb it down for you but he couldn't have predicted what would happen.
onken said:Why don't you read my post again and figure out its implications?
1) "Consumer"Eternal Sleeper said:#1 It's a known fact that Sony is still selling PS3s at a loss.
Hence, this is not a case like the PS2, X360 or even wii - where the hardware has been a major profit generator for the company. If anything an increased sale in hardware + potentially decrease sale in software (no one will know) is likely to just hurt Sony more.
2) You're just throwing in a platform where "Homebrew" is ... well, already available ... how does your response even make sense???#2 PC says hello. Don't even get me started on SecuRom.
Another example of potential hacking causing harm to the end users? Let's see... RSX disabled for Linux on the PS3 to prevent exploits, firmware updates that restrict homebrew capabilities for people who doesn't even care about backups!
3) See 1)#3 See #1
Did the ability to play bootlegs on relatively inexpensive CDR's help the PS1 defeat the N64?#4
I'm failing to see how your argument of wii's sales has anything to do with the end user.
In fact...there's no point in using system sales in arguments concerning hacks. No one can determine the exact correlation between "hacking" and system sales.
Did the ability to play backup eventually lend a hand in killing the dreamcast?
Did the ability to play iso/cso eventually lend a hand to poor psp sofware sales?
Did X360's hackability eventually lend a hand to its current market?
No one can tell for sure.
Not to mention...it really depends on the end user.
Homebrews = good, piracy (or pointless hacking ) = bad.
they've banned people before, so they obviously have the tools to ban. now, if what you're really asking is will they be able to detect possible exploits in the future, they should be able to, at least for the first few rounds of cat & mouse.NinjaFusion said:is there any evidence thus far that sony have the tools to ban cheaters?
Modded guns are rife in borderlands, for instance.
my questions are: why would they bother? is it worth the effort? shouldn't they concentrate on something else?gofreak said:Right, and Sony could turn around then and change their data mining to flag this... My point though was the question of whether Sony would sit back and do nothing in this scenario, or could do nothing. I'm not sure why one would assume that.
this is the type of thread where we speculate along many paths, this isn't really a wait and see thread. i mean, he hasn't even got hello world running and people are talking about PS2 emulators, XBMC ports with MKV BABY and PIRACYMANIA RUNNIN' WILD BROTHER!!!No, but again my point was that we're in little better position to speculate on it today than a week ago. Until the system's fully cracked, and we know the method used, we could speculate along many paths.
gofreak said:...
Anyway...we could have an interesting debate about these things but I dunno if this thread is the right one for it.
oh, so you'll pretend it's robust, but i can't pretend that there are weak links somewhere like many previous instances of chains of trust... your position makes sense i swear!obonicus said:Except we may be talking about a much more robust security system than we've seen in other hacked consoles. Let's not pretend to know what we're talking about, okay?
consumers would be affected by a company not making games for their console? so basically, Nintendo is worse for consumers than Piracy?Mario said:I feel "but companies are still making large profits" is one of the worst arguments to suggest piracy doesn't damage the industry or harm consumers. The relative security and level of piracy for any given platform factors into profitability for individual titles and companies, and this factors into things such as project greenlighting, budget, and platform mix considerations. If piracy becomes rife on a platform then titles which might otherwise have been made won't be made. Not to mention platform holders may change policy or implementations around DRM for either the platform in question or future platforms. In those instances, consumers would be affected, though it would be difficult to "see".
But this discussion is probably best kept for another thread.
The Faceless Master said:oh, so you'll pretend it's robust, but i can't pretend that there are weak links somewhere like many previous instances of chains of trust... your position makes sense i swear!
He's not necessarily committing any crime, and the creators of this kind of thing take steps to keep themselves on the right side of the law. Like if you jailbreak your iPhone, they're very careful not to include the official firmware files in there - you have to download them through iTunes yourself - because then it would be breaking copyright law and Apple would be able to go after them. Same situation with some emulators that require an official BIOS, or the original Xbox when apps were created with the leaked XDK.pseudocaesar said:Not to bring up the piracy issue, this is actually a genuine query. What are the legalities of what that kid does? There is a wikipedia article on him for pete sake, and he openly admits to hacking the Iphone etc, and now the PS3? Where does he stand legally? Why would he be so brazen about his actions?
everyone talks about how great their security is before it's cracked, then they talk about how great it was.obonicus said:What's my position? All the whitepapers talk about its robustness. Everyone but geohotz talk about its robustness. He seems to think you can simply avoid the whole isolated SPU entirely and run unsigned code via the PPU, but people are understandably skeptical. My position? I don't know, either way. But I'm not the one pretending to know, either.
So either you're saying something trivially true ('if there's a vulnerability it can be exploited') or you're making a more specific statement about the PS3's security system, which you don't seem to know about (and neither do I).
*face palm*Johnny Utah said:Region Free gaming here i come baby.![]()
It's a joke. I mean, I hope it was meant to be a joke...RavenFox said:*face palm*
The Faceless Master said:my questions are: why would they bother? is it worth the effort? shouldn't they concentrate on something else?
people cheat their gamerscore on XBL, and in some cases it's VERY obvious, but MS only goes after the people who have really really high gamerscores full of cheated achievements. it's not worth it to them to set up such a system, why would it be for Sony, especially when people can make a new account for free? well, unless they ban consoles. then the walmart swapping starts...
The Faceless Master said:this is the type of thread where we speculate along many paths, this isn't really a wait and see thread. i mean, he hasn't even got hello world running and people are talking about PS2 emulators, XBMC ports with MKV BABY and PIRACYMANIA RUNNIN' WILD BROTHER!!!
onken said:If Apple thought they had a cat's chance in hell at going after this guy then they would have done. It's as simple as that, really.
The Faceless Master said:everyone talks about how great their security is before it's cracked, then they talk about how great it was.
your position seems clear to me based on the wording and tone of your responses and which posts you choose to respond to. it's the same thing the "god hates fags" people do... they point out what god says and then say it's god's position, not theirs.
nah, i pick and choose who and what to believe, and based on geohot's rep, i choose to believe.obonicus said:So you're a true believer, then? No matter the evidence, as soon as someone says something is real you believe? We haven't seen unsigned code run yet, we haven't seen GPU access, we haven't seen SPE access, we haven't seen anything besides his r/w access to system memory.
your position seems clear to me based on the wording and tone of your responses and which posts you choose to respond to. it's the same thing the "god hates fags" people do... they point out what god says and then say it's god's position, not theirs.My position is that you don't know what you're talking about. I hope that part is 100% clear. This discussion has far too much noise without you piping in, stating trivialities disguised as knowledge.
yeah, that's what i'm saying... stopping trophy cheating would be very low on their list and not really worth the effort except to go after the people who make it really obvious.gofreak said:We can debate if it's worth tracking down to the nth degree...I'm not sure. I dunno. I don't really care if people out there cheat their way to ridiculous numbers of trophies. I scarcely care about my own...but if I did, I guess I'd only compare in comparison to my friends who I'd hope wouldn't be cheating.
But I think the concern raised was if Sony would or could track and deal with these things to the degree MS does...which begs the question why not...
I think Sony WOULD be far more worried about other things a patched OS could bring. That would attract their attention...so as a byproduct of such a hack, trophy cheating would also come under their guns. If a patched OS was only used for trophy cheating, I dunno if they'd bother, but it's likely it would be used in an array of other activities that would be less to Sony's taste (I don't just mean the 'p' word).
yep. then again, this is NeoGAF.Which is all kinda crazy...
George Hotz said...
lv1 is in ram, i r/w ram...
January 23, 2010 8:23 PM
If they start using lv1ldr for anything I don't like...I'll just kick it out.
Just because it's isolated doesn't mean it keeps running. PPE can say no.
January 24, 2010 12:49 AM
And for GPU access, I think you already have it, just no driver. Hacking doesn't change that,
although reversing lv1 could aid development.
January 24, 2010 12:50 AM
On my system SPE3 is disabled and SPE2 runs security, leaving 6 SPEs for games and otheros.
Theres another fuse register which says which SPEs are actually broken and hard disabled in
manufacture, which mine is. But yea, I bet a percentage of PS3s could get access to all 8.
January 24, 2010 1:25 AM
The SPUs don't actually need to be hacked to do anything with the system. The PPE can kick out
isolated SPUs, so it has the higher level of control. You can just use the SPUs to load things, kick them
out, then patch to your hearts content.
January 24, 2010 2:12 AM
Granted, if we could decrypt the ISO SPUs, things would be a lot easier.
January 24, 2010 2:13 AM
Read your last paragraph in your last comment, and you'll see why I'm right.
You can't expect to know everything and dump every piece of code. This hack is enough for
homebrew, full linux, and even backups.
January 24, 2010 2:17 AM
The Faceless Master said:your position seems clear to me based on the wording and tone of your responses and which posts you choose to respond to. it's the same thing the "god hates fags" people do... they point out what god says and then say it's god's position, not theirs.
H_Prestige said:Found this:
Read your last paragraph in your last comment, and you'll see why I'm right.
You can't expect to know everything and dump every piece of code. This hack is enough for
homebrew, full linux, and even backups.
January 24, 2010 2:17 AM
gregor7777 said:Full linux is nice but you're still badly limited in system memory. A nice lightweight window manager will help a lot there, but expectations should be tempered even if full access to the system is granted.
>Lagspike_exe said:512MB isn't really that bad...
gregor7777 said:What would the point of Hello World be when I can do that now on a Linux PS3? It still wouldn't prove a thing.
Lagspike_exe said:512MB isn't really that bad...
It's actually 256mb (at least it's friggin fast)... By the way nice name.
Lagspike_exe said:512MB isn't really that bad...
Solid Moustache said:>Read your last paragraph in your last comment, and you'll see why I'm right.
You can't expect to know everything and dump every piece of code. This hack is enough for
homebrew, full linux, and even backups.
Wow... it's so good I can't believe it... Can any techie in gaf tell me if what he said is possible? (unsigned without accessing the security psu blah blah etc).
>
It's actually 256mb (at least it's friggin fast)... By the way nice name.
Solid Moustache said:>Read your last paragraph in your last comment, and you'll see why I'm right.
You can't expect to know everything and dump every piece of code. This hack is enough for
homebrew, full linux, and even backups.
Wow... it's so good I can't believe it... Can any techie in gaf tell me if what he said is possible? (unsigned without accessing the security psu blah blah etc).
Mael said:Huh? I don't know the technicality but if ps2 emulation is possible through homebrew, why isn't sony provding it?
Or is that only for old ps3 with bc in?
H_Prestige said:PS2 was never emulated. Only the emotion engine was emulated, but the early models still had the ps2 GPU on board, which is supposedly the impossible part to emulate on ps3.
Mael said:So just to make sure,
Is this backdoor supposed to provide emulation of ps2 possible for the slims or is it just some technical talk I can ignore while getting out the ps2 out of its closet?
Mael said:So just to make sure,
Is this backdoor supposed to provide emulation of ps2 possible for the slims or is it just some technical talk I can ignore while getting out the ps2 out of its closet?
Mario said:I feel "but companies are still making large profits" is one of the worst arguments to suggest piracy doesn't damage the industry or harm consumers.
bcn-ron said:I agree the process has been mostly transparent on the consoles. The DRM arms race did add a few layers of complication to PC gaming though, and got some really terrible laws made (DMCA).
Alec said:Technical talk that you can ignore. PS2 Emulation is is definitely skipping a few steps in terms of PS3 Homebrew. =P
Somnid said:It's all nice and good but like 360 these are machines that were designed with the idea that they would be hacked. As soon as any exploit is released so that the homebrew community can do anything Sony will probably issue a mandatory update fairly quickly. It take many months for homebrew to develop and by the time it does vulnerable systems will be in short supply and lose all online functionality. It's also unclear how much is possible, unless he can insert something in the boot process (which is unlikely without being able to sign it unless Sony screwed up) then the hack won't be persistent and you'd have to do it every time.
I don't expect this to mean much more than the 360 hypervisor exploits.