Because of course the corporations are evil and must be destroyed at all costs for having the gall to try and make money.ArBeater said:There are no good guys in this story. However, I'd tend to be more pissed off at the people defending Sony.
Because of course the corporations are evil and must be destroyed at all costs for having the gall to try and make money.ArBeater said:There are no good guys in this story. However, I'd tend to be more pissed off at the people defending Sony.
Ok you can't compare switching car models to software laws and I'm going to point out why. First I'm going to bold what stuck out for meAgayek said:And most of it is bullshit. I've railed against it since it started.Arehexes said:Sony consent firmware updates on the psp will leave some people high and dry for new games (unless you know how to fix it with plug ins with a decent CFW) and if you still use CFW you can't use the UMD drive to play ANY GAME or access the psn store outside of a ps3 or computer. Nintendo has updates that can render homebrew useless until a fix is out. Nintendo has multiple different firmwares for the DSlites/Bricks (There is a test using picochat and removing a DS card while it's in use to see which firmware is which). The DSi has firmware updates, and the xbox 360 has updates to prevent illegal hacks/mods from online. All this stuff to prevent "messing with the software or modding it" was WAY before otherOS was removed. Heck even though it is legal to jailbreak a iphone you still lose the warranty on it (and I don't know about iPhones but I can restore a Droid X using the same software verizon uses). And some droid phones are locked down (even though it's supposed to be open for use unless you get a dev phone like the Nexus phones). So this whole sony is removing/making it hard for modders isn't new at all. Hell Unreal torniment 3 on the PS3 allows mods while the xbox version doesn't. I just don't understand this sudden revelation about companies removing X feature or function.
Oh yeah and it's not just small time modders who try to break consoles, when the NES was the big system companies had a voltage spike system to burn out the 10NES chip from reading fake carts(Don't know if it's 100% relevant but it's just creepy companies can damaged a system like that back then -_-).
The fact of the matter is, the removal of features customers paid for is a violation of basic consumer rights. It doesn't matter if it's Sony, Microsoft, or the Mom & Pop store down the street.
It's effectively the same thing as someone selling you a convertible, then coming by a year later and swapping it out for a hardtop of the same model. You would have a legal case of a violation of consumer rights. Because our laws regarding digital media are so outdated and broken, the consumer doesn't have that same protection in the software realm. It's utter bullshit.
There have been a few cases about hardware in gaming in courts one that sticks out most is thisIt's effectively the same thing as someone selling you a convertible, then coming by a year later and swapping it out for a hardtop of the same model. You would have a legal case of a violation of consumer rights. Because our laws regarding digital media are so outdated and broken, the consumer doesn't have that same protection in the software realm. It's utter bullshit.
.Coleco had touted a hardware add-on called the Expansion Module #1 which made the ColecoVision compatible with the industry-leading Atari 2600. Functionally, this gave the ColecoVision the largest software library of any console of its day. The expansion module prompted legal action from Atari, but Atari was unable to stop sales of the module because the 2600 could be reproduced with standard parts. Coleco was also able to design and market the Gemini game system which was an exact clone of the 2600, but with combined joystick/paddle controllers.
ummm yeah thats not totaly true, hitler wasnt the brightest when it come to battle tactics, if he was a genius he wouldnt have made the HUGE tactical blunders of:samsonguy920 said:Hitler was a superior tactician who had Europe under his control in under 5 years. But he committed wide genocide in the process on people who didn't threaten him at all.
Yes you did you said it hereEradiusLore said:did i at any point say anything about using products from a large corp? all i said was the people at own them tend to be arseholes who only care about money. what so i have to love a companies executives to use their stuff? so you have to love obama to use an american service? no you dont, i can ***** as much as i like about those people because i can. i know they dont give a shit about me or you, but that dosent bother me. i will still buy/use the products/services even if i know its an extortionate amount of money compared to what it actually costs. so yeah STFU!Arehexes said:I love posts like this because I want to ask this "Do you use anything made by a "huge corporation" was your computer used by a independent company? Do you use a open source OS? Do you use a Cell Phone and if so did you are some small company make the phone/software it runs? Do you use a console made by microsoft, sony, or nintendo or do you use a open source system?" If you use any thing from a "huge corporation" then dude you need to shut up because your a hypocrite end of story man.EradiusLore said:sony are a huge corporation, the bottom line is the top brass of any global corporation (95% of the time) wont give a shit about the consumer, seriously they couldnt care less if you all died as long as your ghosts continued to pay for new sony stuff. so an attack on any corporation is a good thing.
seems like your talking about buying stuff from a uncaring company to me and ranting about it.they couldnt care less if you all died as long as your ghosts continued to pay for new sony stuff. so an attack on any corporation is a good thing.
Yeah, god forbid we enjoy our hobby of playing video games and own a PS3, right? God forbid we might just want Sony to be able to get PSN and the store up and running so we can fully enjoy said hobby, right?ArBeater said:There are no good guys in this story. However, I'd tend to be more pissed off at the people defending Sony.
Your example isn't terribly valid, because neither of us own the escapist. Now, if I were to purchase a server from someone and use it to upload videos and photos onto the internet. Then, suddenly, the guy I bought it from comes swooping in and says "Ok, you can only upload photos from now on". That's the kind of thing Sony has done. They took something you purchased and said "Ok, we've decided you can't use that feature anymore".Arehexes said:That wasn't over software used to run the games it was the hardware that was reproduced. There is 3 in 1 systems knock offs made to play older game carts you can buy easy (My local mom and pop store sells a lot of them). There are countless hardware mods for current and old systems that are popular and posted on game sites and NONE OF THEM WERE SUED. You have got to stop using a car as a point, you need to use something software based because hardware mods happen for all kinds of things and those are legal because that laptop 360 thing that was made a few years back didn't give anyone access that microsoft didn't want anyone to have. You are whining about two different things in the same argument but the problem is one is legal the other isn't. And a lot of people do this, yes you can legally blow up a system, but you can't give yourself access your not allowed to have.
Lets try this as an example, we both have access to use the escapist's forums to post, but we are not allowed access to features on the site (lets say we don't have access to upload videos to the site or access a certain forum here). If were were to hack the site to allow access the escapist would have the right to kick us out would they not? The issue is getting access we are not supposed to have.
Ah but Geohot doesn't own the software for the ps3 he owned the hardware. If companies couldn't change anything then sony, microsoft, or nintendo couldn't force us to update if we want to play the newest games or use online. And sony didn't alter your property (that would be the console itself) they altered their software on your system. You don't own the software and you never did, if that was the case sony would give out the source code and release it under a GCC like license (I can't remember the right one atm).Agayek said:Your example isn't terribly valid, because neither of us own the escapist. Now, if I were to purchase a server from someone and use it to upload videos and photos onto the internet. Then, suddenly, the guy I bought it from comes swooping in and says "Ok, you can only upload photos from now on". That's the kind of thing Sony has done. They took something you purchased and said "Ok, we've decided you can't use that feature anymore".Arehexes said:That wasn't over software used to run the games it was the hardware that was reproduced. There is 3 in 1 systems knock offs made to play older game carts you can buy easy (My local mom and pop store sells a lot of them). There are countless hardware mods for current and old systems that are popular and posted on game sites and NONE OF THEM WERE SUED. You have got to stop using a car as a point, you need to use something software based because hardware mods happen for all kinds of things and those are legal because that laptop 360 thing that was made a few years back didn't give anyone access that microsoft didn't want anyone to have. You are whining about two different things in the same argument but the problem is one is legal the other isn't. And a lot of people do this, yes you can legally blow up a system, but you can't give yourself access your not allowed to have.
Lets try this as an example, we both have access to use the escapist's forums to post, but we are not allowed access to features on the site (lets say we don't have access to upload videos to the site or access a certain forum here). If were were to hack the site to allow access the escapist would have the right to kick us out would they not? The issue is getting access we are not supposed to have.
The car analogy is fairly accurate. You bought a car (or a console), the seller came by later and took away your convertible roof (or Other OS) that you paid for. It's a perfectly valid comparison.
I don't give a flying fuck if Sony, or anyone else, sues people for modifying their consoles (though I would definitely be against them winning it). My problem is that Sony is legally allowed to alter your property after you paid for it. I can't make it any clearer than that. You buy something, then at any point in the future, Sony can say "Welp, it can't do that anymore", at will.
I don't see how this doesn't cause at least some level of concern. It's a gross violation of basic consumer rights, specifically the right to what you paid for. The only reason software companies keep getting away with it is that our laws are too horrendously archaic for the digital age.
For me Sony's business model is damaging, what they and other big companies are during will as far as I can see sooner or later make the hold gaming industry crash again. Therefore I find it better if one of the worst offended crash alone and give the others a wakeup call.Jumplion said:So you support bringing down an entire section of a multimedia corporation that, if brought down, would have literally thousands upon thousands of people out of work, dozens of developers without a publisher, hundreds of games canceled in development, an entire system brought to dust, losing competition in a competition-heavy industry, all because Sony did something that some hackers/crackers/whatever didn't like?linwolf said:Sony fucked up so big on this that I won't be unhappy if their entire gaming division goes down. On the flip I don't like vigilantism, so I hope they get caught. About Geohot I don't like him but what he did should be legal.
I don't care what anyone says, having Sony, or any other gaming company for that matter, go down would be disastrous not only for the video game industry, but for several other industries and the world depending on the extent of the "bringing down".
As for these hackers/crackers/whatever, it's all really confusing. I don't know what to think about the Geohot vs. Sony stuff, but I won't lump Geohot in with the current hackers. He stated that he does not support what these guys are doing. These current assholes of hackers are just assholes. They have no justification for their actions. You do not punch the bully's victim to prove to him that bullying is bad. They had absolutely no right to steal 70+ million people's information, and doing so completely invalidates any point they were (allegedly) trying to make.
Well they modded software they didn't own, you can mod the hardware but software is different. Why do you think you can by a premade desktop from bestbuy and upgrade it later? Heck if you go to a mom and pop store you can find crappy multi cart systems and they aren't sued by companies for it. And there are famous console modders(and I mean hardware) who are posted all over games sites not sued. But none of that was software, the key difference is software that the company owns. Heck from some places I've read you don't even own a Mac (hardware or software), so sony isn't the first or only to pull this crappokepuke said:Sony never gave a valid reason for removing OtherOS. They vaguely hinted at security, which I don't think any specific were given on, so it sounds like complete bullshit. Piracy was never the issue.
Many people have concluded that it was because IBM was seeing the PS3 cut into its server market share, so they forced Sony to remove the feature to keep the Cell deal going. You could cluster a few together and still pay less than a single server for $2-3k.
The PS3 also was causing Sony to lose money because all the hardware the worth more than the price. Since many people looking to utilize OtherOS wouldn't even bother with PS3 games, Sony would be losing out when they don't end up with that sweet licensing cash coming in afterward.
Either way, Sony was doing bad business, and targeting customers for modding a product they own is just a dick move.
I highly doubt any other company would get a "wakeup call" from anyone crashing, and in fact would only serve to cause more collapses. Whatever business models you disagree with, them crashing would not only bring down the bad, but it'd bring down the good as well. As I said, thousands would be out of a job (not only developers, but engineers, PR reps, etc...), along with some sort of impact on the global economy, with some developers without a publisher (or no developer in general) with potential difficulty in relocating certain studios, and generally just a collapse of some part of gaming. I would not be surprised if one collapse would cause everyone else to follow suit in the tremor.linwolf said:For me Sony's business model is damaging, what they and other big companies are during will as far as I can see sooner or later make the hold gaming industry crash again. Therefore I find it better if one of the worst offended crash alone and give the others a wakeup call.
The problem with this logic is that the hardware is useless on it's own, and Sony's terms mean you can't replace the software. (They specifically designed it so the software can't be replaced with anything other than what Sony made.)Arehexes said:Ah but Geohot doesn't own the software for the ps3 he owned the hardware. If companies couldn't change anything then sony, microsoft, or nintendo couldn't force us to update if we want to play the newest games or use online. And sony didn't alter your property (that would be the console itself) they altered their software on your system. You don't own the software and you never did, if that was the case sony would give out the source code and release it under a GCC like license (I can't remember the right one atm).Agayek said:Your example isn't terribly valid, because neither of us own the escapist. Now, if I were to purchase a server from someone and use it to upload videos and photos onto the internet. Then, suddenly, the guy I bought it from comes swooping in and says "Ok, you can only upload photos from now on". That's the kind of thing Sony has done. They took something you purchased and said "Ok, we've decided you can't use that feature anymore".Arehexes said:That wasn't over software used to run the games it was the hardware that was reproduced. There is 3 in 1 systems knock offs made to play older game carts you can buy easy (My local mom and pop store sells a lot of them). There are countless hardware mods for current and old systems that are popular and posted on game sites and NONE OF THEM WERE SUED. You have got to stop using a car as a point, you need to use something software based because hardware mods happen for all kinds of things and those are legal because that laptop 360 thing that was made a few years back didn't give anyone access that microsoft didn't want anyone to have. You are whining about two different things in the same argument but the problem is one is legal the other isn't. And a lot of people do this, yes you can legally blow up a system, but you can't give yourself access your not allowed to have.
Lets try this as an example, we both have access to use the escapist's forums to post, but we are not allowed access to features on the site (lets say we don't have access to upload videos to the site or access a certain forum here). If were were to hack the site to allow access the escapist would have the right to kick us out would they not? The issue is getting access we are not supposed to have.
The car analogy is fairly accurate. You bought a car (or a console), the seller came by later and took away your convertible roof (or Other OS) that you paid for. It's a perfectly valid comparison.
I don't give a flying fuck if Sony, or anyone else, sues people for modifying their consoles (though I would definitely be against them winning it). My problem is that Sony is legally allowed to alter your property after you paid for it. I can't make it any clearer than that. You buy something, then at any point in the future, Sony can say "Welp, it can't do that anymore", at will.
I don't see how this doesn't cause at least some level of concern. It's a gross violation of basic consumer rights, specifically the right to what you paid for. The only reason software companies keep getting away with it is that our laws are too horrendously archaic for the digital age.
And my question is this "idea" isn't a new thing from any game company this generation. Nintendo won't let you play any new game or access the wii shop store unless you updated (hey you paid to play for the game system to play games). Microsoft blocks you from using online play if you don't update your game (even though you payed for XBL), and sony blocks you from playing new games/use psn market unless you update.
And for the car the idea would better be if they updated a chip in your car to lower how fast it can go, or if it reported you if you were speeding to the police. And if you didn't you would loss the right to drive your car by it not starting because you didn't put the newest chip in it. You may own the car itself but software it runs you don't own and can't mod. Again that is why you don't see console modders sued by companies (even the fake knock off consoles).
Ok fair enough but there are open source consoles available (most were handhelds but there was one open source console I believe but it bombed badly). Hell the open pandora (which I wish I could get, I followed that sucker since it was first talked about like 2 years ago) is pretty powerful open source device that already gives us the access they want. So is it that they want access or is it they want the challenge? I'm for messing with hardware I've done it multiple times (sadly it never seems worth it cause of how unstable it always is, if my palm T|X could run linux I would be happy). Sadly it seems even TI is taking this route with their calcs in programming -_- (that was a tangent but I'm bumbed the new CX might not be as powerful as 68K basic on a 89)CrystalShadow said:The problem with this logic is that the hardware is useless on it's own, and Sony's terms mean you can't replace the software. (They specifically designed it so the software can't be replaced with anything other than what Sony made.)Arehexes said:Ah but Geohot doesn't own the software for the ps3 he owned the hardware. If companies couldn't change anything then sony, microsoft, or nintendo couldn't force us to update if we want to play the newest games or use online. And sony didn't alter your property (that would be the console itself) they altered their software on your system. You don't own the software and you never did, if that was the case sony would give out the source code and release it under a GCC like license (I can't remember the right one atm).Agayek said:Your example isn't terribly valid, because neither of us own the escapist. Now, if I were to purchase a server from someone and use it to upload videos and photos onto the internet. Then, suddenly, the guy I bought it from comes swooping in and says "Ok, you can only upload photos from now on". That's the kind of thing Sony has done. They took something you purchased and said "Ok, we've decided you can't use that feature anymore".Arehexes said:That wasn't over software used to run the games it was the hardware that was reproduced. There is 3 in 1 systems knock offs made to play older game carts you can buy easy (My local mom and pop store sells a lot of them). There are countless hardware mods for current and old systems that are popular and posted on game sites and NONE OF THEM WERE SUED. You have got to stop using a car as a point, you need to use something software based because hardware mods happen for all kinds of things and those are legal because that laptop 360 thing that was made a few years back didn't give anyone access that microsoft didn't want anyone to have. You are whining about two different things in the same argument but the problem is one is legal the other isn't. And a lot of people do this, yes you can legally blow up a system, but you can't give yourself access your not allowed to have.
Lets try this as an example, we both have access to use the escapist's forums to post, but we are not allowed access to features on the site (lets say we don't have access to upload videos to the site or access a certain forum here). If were were to hack the site to allow access the escapist would have the right to kick us out would they not? The issue is getting access we are not supposed to have.
The car analogy is fairly accurate. You bought a car (or a console), the seller came by later and took away your convertible roof (or Other OS) that you paid for. It's a perfectly valid comparison.
I don't give a flying fuck if Sony, or anyone else, sues people for modifying their consoles (though I would definitely be against them winning it). My problem is that Sony is legally allowed to alter your property after you paid for it. I can't make it any clearer than that. You buy something, then at any point in the future, Sony can say "Welp, it can't do that anymore", at will.
I don't see how this doesn't cause at least some level of concern. It's a gross violation of basic consumer rights, specifically the right to what you paid for. The only reason software companies keep getting away with it is that our laws are too horrendously archaic for the digital age.
And my question is this "idea" isn't a new thing from any game company this generation. Nintendo won't let you play any new game or access the wii shop store unless you updated (hey you paid to play for the game system to play games). Microsoft blocks you from using online play if you don't update your game (even though you payed for XBL), and sony blocks you from playing new games/use psn market unless you update.
And for the car the idea would better be if they updated a chip in your car to lower how fast it can go, or if it reported you if you were speeding to the police. And if you didn't you would loss the right to drive your car by it not starting because you didn't put the newest chip in it. You may own the car itself but software it runs you don't own and can't mod. Again that is why you don't see console modders sued by companies (even the fake knock off consoles).
In fact, if you look at the information of what the hackers tried to do, (and more or less what Geohotz succeeded in doing), it's getting access to Sony's Hardware at the earliest point in the PS3's boot process.
In other words, the whole point of the hack was to get at the hardware directly at the first point possible. (because trying to get to it any earlier is impossible; The 'software' is hard-coded into the console)
That means, essentially, replacing every single bit of Sony's code possible with something completely different of the hacker's choosing.
That's what the hackers want.
They want to REMOVE all of Sony's (or Microsoft's, or Nintendo's, or whatever's) code, and substitute their own.
It's the hardware they want, not the software.
Problem is, the design of these consoles makes that quite difficult to do. So... What the hackers try to do is break the software to see what the earliest possible point is that they can replace as much of it as possible without rendering the hardware completely useless.
Modifying the software isn't the goal of the hacker. It's simply the only route available most of the time because of how the hardware and software are designed to fit together.
Welcome to the internet - people don't make sense.bdcjacko said:I don't have a playstation, so I don't really have a dog in the race so to speak, I'm just trying to figure out what is going on.Daystar Clarion said:Hey, neck bearded man-children have got to find something to stroke their god complex. I just get pissed off when it ruins my fun.
I know it's not that simple but I don't want to type out an entire essay on the subject. So let me put it simple I have only brought one AAA new game, thank god of GOG and indie, this year because I find that I can't support most developer and publisher. And the way I see it before it can get better there has to happen something really damaging for the industry.Jumplion said:I highly doubt any other company would get a "wakeup call" from anyone crashing, and in fact would only serve to cause more collapses. Whatever business models you disagree with, them crashing would not only bring down the bad, but it'd bring down the good as well. As I said, thousands would be out of a job (not only developers, but engineers, PR reps, etc...), along with some sort of impact on the global economy, with some developers without a publisher (or no developer in general) with potential difficulty in relocating certain studios, and generally just a collapse of some part of gaming. I would not be surprised if one collapse would cause everyone else to follow suit in the tremor.linwolf said:For me Sony's business model is damaging, what they and other big companies are during will as far as I can see sooner or later make the hold gaming industry crash again. Therefore I find it better if one of the worst offended crash alone and give the others a wakeup call.
It's not nearly as simple as I think you think it may be.
Now, I can understand getting knocked down a peg or two. Every company needs to have some sense slapped into them once in a while. But an entire collapse? That's just cruel to those who need the jobs.
Well, I think there's more than one reason.Arehexes said:Ok fair enough but there are open source consoles available (most were handhelds but there was one open source console I believe but it bombed badly). Hell the open pandora (which I wish I could get, I followed that sucker since it was first talked about like 2 years ago) is pretty powerful open source device that already gives us the access they want. So is it that they want access or is it they want the challenge? I'm for messing with hardware I've done it multiple times (sadly it never seems worth it cause of how unstable it always is, if my palm T|X could run linux I would be happy). Sadly it seems even TI is taking this route with their calcs in programming -_- (that was a tangent but I'm bumbed the new CX might not be as powerful as 68K basic on a 89)CrystalShadow said:The problem with this logic is that the hardware is useless on it's own, and Sony's terms mean you can't replace the software. (They specifically designed it so the software can't be replaced with anything other than what Sony made.)Arehexes said:Ah but Geohot doesn't own the software for the ps3 he owned the hardware. If companies couldn't change anything then sony, microsoft, or nintendo couldn't force us to update if we want to play the newest games or use online. And sony didn't alter your property (that would be the console itself) they altered their software on your system. You don't own the software and you never did, if that was the case sony would give out the source code and release it under a GCC like license (I can't remember the right one atm).Agayek said:Your example isn't terribly valid, because neither of us own the escapist. Now, if I were to purchase a server from someone and use it to upload videos and photos onto the internet. Then, suddenly, the guy I bought it from comes swooping in and says "Ok, you can only upload photos from now on". That's the kind of thing Sony has done. They took something you purchased and said "Ok, we've decided you can't use that feature anymore".Arehexes said:That wasn't over software used to run the games it was the hardware that was reproduced. There is 3 in 1 systems knock offs made to play older game carts you can buy easy (My local mom and pop store sells a lot of them). There are countless hardware mods for current and old systems that are popular and posted on game sites and NONE OF THEM WERE SUED. You have got to stop using a car as a point, you need to use something software based because hardware mods happen for all kinds of things and those are legal because that laptop 360 thing that was made a few years back didn't give anyone access that microsoft didn't want anyone to have. You are whining about two different things in the same argument but the problem is one is legal the other isn't. And a lot of people do this, yes you can legally blow up a system, but you can't give yourself access your not allowed to have.
Lets try this as an example, we both have access to use the escapist's forums to post, but we are not allowed access to features on the site (lets say we don't have access to upload videos to the site or access a certain forum here). If were were to hack the site to allow access the escapist would have the right to kick us out would they not? The issue is getting access we are not supposed to have.
The car analogy is fairly accurate. You bought a car (or a console), the seller came by later and took away your convertible roof (or Other OS) that you paid for. It's a perfectly valid comparison.
I don't give a flying fuck if Sony, or anyone else, sues people for modifying their consoles (though I would definitely be against them winning it). My problem is that Sony is legally allowed to alter your property after you paid for it. I can't make it any clearer than that. You buy something, then at any point in the future, Sony can say "Welp, it can't do that anymore", at will.
I don't see how this doesn't cause at least some level of concern. It's a gross violation of basic consumer rights, specifically the right to what you paid for. The only reason software companies keep getting away with it is that our laws are too horrendously archaic for the digital age.
And my question is this "idea" isn't a new thing from any game company this generation. Nintendo won't let you play any new game or access the wii shop store unless you updated (hey you paid to play for the game system to play games). Microsoft blocks you from using online play if you don't update your game (even though you payed for XBL), and sony blocks you from playing new games/use psn market unless you update.
And for the car the idea would better be if they updated a chip in your car to lower how fast it can go, or if it reported you if you were speeding to the police. And if you didn't you would loss the right to drive your car by it not starting because you didn't put the newest chip in it. You may own the car itself but software it runs you don't own and can't mod. Again that is why you don't see console modders sued by companies (even the fake knock off consoles).
In fact, if you look at the information of what the hackers tried to do, (and more or less what Geohotz succeeded in doing), it's getting access to Sony's Hardware at the earliest point in the PS3's boot process.
In other words, the whole point of the hack was to get at the hardware directly at the first point possible. (because trying to get to it any earlier is impossible; The 'software' is hard-coded into the console)
That means, essentially, replacing every single bit of Sony's code possible with something completely different of the hacker's choosing.
That's what the hackers want.
They want to REMOVE all of Sony's (or Microsoft's, or Nintendo's, or whatever's) code, and substitute their own.
It's the hardware they want, not the software.
Problem is, the design of these consoles makes that quite difficult to do. So... What the hackers try to do is break the software to see what the earliest possible point is that they can replace as much of it as possible without rendering the hardware completely useless.
Modifying the software isn't the goal of the hacker. It's simply the only route available most of the time because of how the hardware and software are designed to fit together.