I think we're coming from amazingly different places on this. Among other things, you seem to think it's perfectly acceptable for 1/3rd of the console market to disappear, undoubtedly putting a lot of people who are in no position to make decisions on things like DRM or keeping/trashing features, out of business in an already difficult job market, just to teach the people at the top who did make that decision... what, a lesson in humility?Therumancer said:poiuppx said:[
But there in lies the problem. I don't see Sony EVER looking at this and going 'Well, we better change our ways'. I see it becoming one of two things; an arms race where they use increasingly vicious means to defend and prosecute those they find who are responsible for such hacks, or they'll just give up and walk away from the industry, sell their stuff off, and decide to call the whole thing fun while it lasted, letting someone else deal with the hacker crowd. Under NO circumstances can I see them going 'Well, we sure were wrong. Good thing those hacktivists showed us the better way!'.
More-so, each time something like this occurs, it not only enforces for Sony but for everyone else in the industry paying attention that THESE are the wolves at the gates. Which means the Other OS you and they defend? Yeah, don't expect to see something like that on a new console again any time in the next decade, at minimum. Instead, expect more locked-down consoles with more vicious punishments for breaking said lock-downs in place.
Don't get me wrong, I know hackers will respond in kind, undoubtedly. But that's where the arms race comes in, and if they find you, news flash; there's not a lot of legal ground to stand on when millions of accounts, people's personal information, and potential identity theft are involved. THAT is the big issue with how this all was done; crash the network to prove a point, you piss some folks off but point out the weaknesses. Steal tens of millions of accounts worth of data, you now have entire governments standing up and taking notice. If it becomes clear this was done not for profit but for some hacktivist social-engineering effort, the prosecutors might even be able to convince a judge to just full on label the act terrorism. And once that happens, all the 'good work' this lot 'tried' to do goes out the window on a one-way trip to Gitmo.
Now, mind you, I think that's honestly incorrect. I'm of the mind that, most likely, this was done by someone who saw the vulnerabilities, knew hacktivists would get the blame, was looking to turn a profit, but when it became THIS well known, they freaked and went to ground. That info isn't likely to resurface any time, cause with Sony, the FBI, and Homeland Security looking for the ones behind it, the only smart move is to scrub all the data, trash the computer, and pray they never piece it all together. But the damage, for Sony, gamers, the gaming industry, and yes, for hacktivists, has already been done.
Personally? I would hope for the sake of hacktivists who actually try to do some good in this world, like the ones who helped set up the virtual servers for the Green Revolution in 09 so the protestors could stay in touch with each other, would be smart enough to just let this go. Sony isn't going to change their spots, other than adding armor, spikes, and turret guns to their coat. And further actions will only serve to demonize them to the point that the hard-sell-to-Gitmo won't be too difficult to pull off.
Saying "Sony is too big to make a differance" is exactly why they need to be brought down this way. Your correct that them saying "we're sorry" and changing their ways isn't likely, but you know if they are basically ejected from the internet and this entire area of business instead, that's not a bad thing. There is enough money to be made through video gaming and the internet without victimizing people where someone is going to step up and do it right.
I myself have been saying that I'm expecting another attack, because Sony has so far recovered, and has not capitulated on any level.
To be honest the very fact that the issue is a big one where it doesn't seem anything can be done that will matter, is exactly why it matters, and exactly why Anonymous has been getting attention for these feats, more so than the "hackers" who supported an enviromentalist movement.
In the end only time will tell, personally I think Sony was so dead wrong on the "other OS" thing that it's hard for me to not support the actions being taken against them. Sony set it up so there was obviously no way that the legal system was going to stop them, after all they have their hooks into the lawyers (at least enough to create a conflict of interest) that could sucessflly go after and defeat things like their EULAs and TOS agreements by going after them from the right avenue. Saying "oh well, I guess we should have no rights when it comes to our own property that we paid for" doesn't strike me as being a paticularly good thing any way you look at it, and that's what got these hacker attacks going. The basic ultimatum from where I'm sitting is that The Internet is Anonymous' territory, either Sony backs off, or gives up on having an online prescence.
Now I'd *PREFER* for Sony to get trashed in the legal system, but nobody on the receiving end of thei actions seems to have the money to launch a campaign on that level, and if they DID, there is a question about their abillity to obtain the level of expert counsel they would need to fight Sony's lawyers.
To be honest though, I think a lot of this comes down to pride. I honestly don't think Sony would lose much by admitting it was wrong here, and making a meaningful apology. I actually think they would benefit from it in the long run, but that's a whole differant rant. In the end only time will tell if there are going to be more attacks, and if this is going to go anywhere or if in a couple of years we'll barely remember this little footnote on internet history took place.
Do you know what an impact it would have been for Sony to inform their customers worldwide that "change your card details"? And then a week later publish a press release stating "Nope! Sorry, the intrusion was nothing to worry about. Sorry for the inconvenience." My bet is that people would have been screaming bloody murder at that point. I think better safe than sorry, and in this case it was safer to investigate first.harvz said:it would be nice if they said "we believe its possible our servers have had intruders on them, we arnt sure if anything was taken, please change card details", it would be an inconvenience but would be easy to do and wouldnt have caused all these issues...or, you know, they could have atleast had a free firewall up.
poiuppx said:I think we're coming from amazingly different places on this. Among other things, you seem to think it's perfectly acceptable for 1/3rd of the console market to disappear, undoubtedly putting a lot of people who are in no position to make decisions on things like DRM or keeping/trashing features, out of business in an already difficult job market, just to teach the people at the top who did make that decision... what, a lesson in humility?Therumancer said:poiuppx said:[
But there in lies the problem. I don't see Sony EVER looking at this and going 'Well, we better change our ways'. I see it becoming one of two things; an arms race where they use increasingly vicious means to defend and prosecute those they find who are responsible for such hacks, or they'll just give up and walk away from the industry, sell their stuff off, and decide to call the whole thing fun while it lasted, letting someone else deal with the hacker crowd. Under NO circumstances can I see them going 'Well, we sure were wrong. Good thing those hacktivists showed us the better way!'.
More-so, each time something like this occurs, it not only enforces for Sony but for everyone else in the industry paying attention that THESE are the wolves at the gates. Which means the Other OS you and they defend? Yeah, don't expect to see something like that on a new console again any time in the next decade, at minimum. Instead, expect more locked-down consoles with more vicious punishments for breaking said lock-downs in place.
Don't get me wrong, I know hackers will respond in kind, undoubtedly. But that's where the arms race comes in, and if they find you, news flash; there's not a lot of legal ground to stand on when millions of accounts, people's personal information, and potential identity theft are involved. THAT is the big issue with how this all was done; crash the network to prove a point, you piss some folks off but point out the weaknesses. Steal tens of millions of accounts worth of data, you now have entire governments standing up and taking notice. If it becomes clear this was done not for profit but for some hacktivist social-engineering effort, the prosecutors might even be able to convince a judge to just full on label the act terrorism. And once that happens, all the 'good work' this lot 'tried' to do goes out the window on a one-way trip to Gitmo.
Now, mind you, I think that's honestly incorrect. I'm of the mind that, most likely, this was done by someone who saw the vulnerabilities, knew hacktivists would get the blame, was looking to turn a profit, but when it became THIS well known, they freaked and went to ground. That info isn't likely to resurface any time, cause with Sony, the FBI, and Homeland Security looking for the ones behind it, the only smart move is to scrub all the data, trash the computer, and pray they never piece it all together. But the damage, for Sony, gamers, the gaming industry, and yes, for hacktivists, has already been done.
Personally? I would hope for the sake of hacktivists who actually try to do some good in this world, like the ones who helped set up the virtual servers for the Green Revolution in 09 so the protestors could stay in touch with each other, would be smart enough to just let this go. Sony isn't going to change their spots, other than adding armor, spikes, and turret guns to their coat. And further actions will only serve to demonize them to the point that the hard-sell-to-Gitmo won't be too difficult to pull off.
Saying "Sony is too big to make a differance" is exactly why they need to be brought down this way. Your correct that them saying "we're sorry" and changing their ways isn't likely, but you know if they are basically ejected from the internet and this entire area of business instead, that's not a bad thing. There is enough money to be made through video gaming and the internet without victimizing people where someone is going to step up and do it right.
I myself have been saying that I'm expecting another attack, because Sony has so far recovered, and has not capitulated on any level.
To be honest the very fact that the issue is a big one where it doesn't seem anything can be done that will matter, is exactly why it matters, and exactly why Anonymous has been getting attention for these feats, more so than the "hackers" who supported an enviromentalist movement.
In the end only time will tell, personally I think Sony was so dead wrong on the "other OS" thing that it's hard for me to not support the actions being taken against them. Sony set it up so there was obviously no way that the legal system was going to stop them, after all they have their hooks into the lawyers (at least enough to create a conflict of interest) that could sucessflly go after and defeat things like their EULAs and TOS agreements by going after them from the right avenue. Saying "oh well, I guess we should have no rights when it comes to our own property that we paid for" doesn't strike me as being a paticularly good thing any way you look at it, and that's what got these hacker attacks going. The basic ultimatum from where I'm sitting is that The Internet is Anonymous' territory, either Sony backs off, or gives up on having an online prescence.
Now I'd *PREFER* for Sony to get trashed in the legal system, but nobody on the receiving end of thei actions seems to have the money to launch a campaign on that level, and if they DID, there is a question about their abillity to obtain the level of expert counsel they would need to fight Sony's lawyers.
To be honest though, I think a lot of this comes down to pride. I honestly don't think Sony would lose much by admitting it was wrong here, and making a meaningful apology. I actually think they would benefit from it in the long run, but that's a whole differant rant. In the end only time will tell if there are going to be more attacks, and if this is going to go anywhere or if in a couple of years we'll barely remember this little footnote on internet history took place.
As an additional aside, if this really was Anonymous, I'm damn disappointed in them. This -may- hurt Sony in the long run, but it damn sure hurts the tens of millions of customers who weren't even in any position to make the decision they're protesting, it damn sure hurts the small third-party companies who rely on the PSN and PSN Store to survive, it damn sure hurts the bigger studios for whom these days if you don't have your multiplayer up Day 1 you're almost certain to soak much worse sales, potentially failing to turn a profit and limiting what they can even THINK of doing in the future... do you see what I'm saying here? Whoever did this may have wanted to give Sony a black eye, but in the process was waving the baseball bat around so wildly, they broke everyone else's stuff too. Including the people, suppossedly, this was all for. If it was Anonymous, then to take a twist on what you said above, they don't deserve the internet.
poiuppx said:[
I think we're coming from amazingly different places on this. Among other things, you seem to think it's perfectly acceptable for 1/3rd of the console market to disappear, undoubtedly putting a lot of people who are in no position to make decisions on things like DRM or keeping/trashing features, out of business in an already difficult job market, just to teach the people at the top who did make that decision... what, a lesson in humility?
Also, your use of one word defines this for me; capitulate. If this was done for the social-engineering reason of teaching them a lesson about what they can/can't do with their customer base, they're doing that by engaging in underhanded tactics that produce upheval not for merely the company, but for everyone even tangentally connected, most especially the self-same customer base this is suppossedly for. THAT is where I draw the line; you cannot hold, in effect, the peace of mind and free will choice of the customer base hostage and expect ANY kind of positive reaction.
As an additional aside, if this really was Anonymous, I'm damn disappointed in them. This -may- hurt Sony in the long run, but it damn sure hurts the tens of millions of customers who weren't even in any position to make the decision they're protesting, it damn sure hurts the small third-party companies who rely on the PSN and PSN Store to survive, it damn sure hurts the bigger studios for whom these days if you don't have your multiplayer up Day 1 you're almost certain to soak much worse sales, potentially failing to turn a profit and limiting what they can even THINK of doing in the future... do you see what I'm saying here? Whoever did this may have wanted to give Sony a black eye, but in the process was waving the baseball bat around so wildly, they broke everyone else's stuff too. Including the people, suppossedly, this was all for. If it was Anonymous, then to take a twist on what you said above, they don't deserve the internet.
And in the end, the matter is made clear; to you, this is a holy cause. Let the world burn for the sake of this one matter. Let men suffer. Let children starve. Let all those even tangentally connected die for the sins of their masters and those they have chosen to side with for the sake of being able to provide for their families.Therumancer said:I don't care how many millions might lose their jobs or die (including me actually, I'd probably fight for that if it came to some kind of armed conflict). That's what the situation with the "Other OS" is about on a fundemental level.
?poiuppx said:And in the end, the matter is made clear; to you, this is a holy cause. Let the world burn for the sake of this one matter. Let men suffer. Let children starve. Let all those even tangentally connected die for the sins of their masters and those they have chosen to side with for the sake of being able to provide for their families.Therumancer said:I don't care how many millions might lose their jobs or die (including me actually, I'd probably fight for that if it came to some kind of armed conflict). That's what the situation with the "Other OS" is about on a fundemental level.
This is a course of logic I can't even begin to condemn enough. This is honor taken to obscene extents, and it is why Anonymous and any others who believe in this will fail. Because the millions in the industry and hundreds of millions who support the industry will always outnumber the handful who are willing to take up this cause with crusader-like zeal. And every act made in that spirit condemns the group as a whole.
i would say that it is less than what ended up happening. i would say that you could tell that youve been hacked in less than a week but then again, this is sony, the same sony who pretty much said "security is for cowards" when designing their consoles.Jack Rascal said:Do you know what an impact it would have been for Sony to inform their customers worldwide that "change your card details"? And then a week later publish a press release stating "Nope! Sorry, the intrusion was nothing to worry about. Sorry for the inconvenience." My bet is that people would have been screaming bloody murder at that point. I think better safe than sorry, and in this case it was safer to investigate first.harvz said:it would be nice if they said "we believe its possible our servers have had intruders on them, we arnt sure if anything was taken, please change card details", it would be an inconvenience but would be easy to do and wouldnt have caused all these issues...or, you know, they could have atleast had a free firewall up.
Week is not really a long time, but this is my opinion only. I still think Sony handled this well.
Actually, that's where you're wrong (and a bit hypocritical given you admit you have no skin directly in the game either other than ideology and the fear of corporate seisure of physical property, which is going pretty damn extreme into outcomes as well). Speaking as someone who has spent the last year and a half trying to break into the video game industry on the producer/QA track, yes, I am directly affected. Because this is rather personal for me, and I freely confess that. I don't agree with the logic that says everyone must burn because somehow this will lead to a Neuromancer-style cyberpunk dystopia of corporations owning your soul and leasing it back, as you seem afraid it will.Therumancer said:In fact I think the only reason why your being obstinate in opposing it is because you weren't affected.
Actually yes, I do think that employees at a company that does something like this that is well known should either quit or if they choose to stay be aware of what they are siding with and the risks they are taking. Unlike fantasy there is no such thing as an "antiseptic" conflict in real life where there isn't going to be collateral damage. In the real worldpoiuppx said:Actually, that's where you're wrong (and a bit hypocritical given you admit you have no skin directly in the game either other than ideology and the fear of corporate seisure of physical property, which is going pretty damn extreme into outcomes as well). Speaking as someone who has spent the last year and a half trying to break into the video game industry on the producer/QA track, yes, I am directly affected. Because this is rather personal for me, and I freely confess that. I don't agree with the logic that says everyone must burn because somehow this will lead to a Neuromancer-style cyberpunk dystopia of corporations owning your soul and leasing it back, as you seem afraid it will.Therumancer said:In fact I think the only reason why your being obstinate in opposing it is because you weren't affected.
What I agree with is an industry I give a damn about. I was born in 1985, so literally my life has been one giant timeline of the post-83 crash. Do I have misgivings about what Sony did with Other OS and why they did it? Hell yes. I think they were very short-sighted and should have considered the PR ramifications if nothing else, no matter what the reason they felt it had to be done. But the thing is, you keep treating Sony like a 'Too big to fail' recession-causing company. It's not. Not even close. Their failure or success directly impacts the industry, however.
And honestly... I don't get the mentality here. Are you suggesting that as soon as Other OS was pulled, regardless of any internal memos or whatever, the people working at Sony should have all quit and prayed there were a few million open jobs somewhere else? They should have stormed the corporate offices and killed the CEO? And really, a comparison to Enron of all things is pretty low. Do yourself a favor and look up one of the MANY documentaries on the environment there. The only company that even comes CLOSE to acting that way in the modern video game industry is Activision, and even they aren't making it standard business practice to screw everyone over... well, unless the rumors around Infinity Ward are right, in which case, strike that.
My point is, though, I get that we see this from remarkably different fronts. And honestly, I appreciate that. As I appreciate that you're willing to share your opinions with me at length like this. I respect you infinitly more than those who did this, actually. I may not agree with your logic, or your conclusions- and I damn well know you don't agree with mine -but you had the guts to put them forth and debate them publically, and articulate your viewpoints and concerns in a way that, were I more on the fence, could sway me. As it stands, you at the least gave me pause, regardless of my personal interest in this matter. And that's excellent. That is EXACTLY how this kind of conversation should take place. What these hackers did, however, IF it was motivated by social engineering efforts to chastise Sony's actions re: Other OS and Geohot, only hurts the narrative. That is my main point here; even if you agree with the logic underpinning this, the end result is poisonous and hurtful to everyone, especially their own purpose.
Consider; if the FBI and Homeland Security catches up with who did this, and after all this upheval they stand on a pedistal and say this is why, what do you think the public reaction will be? What do you think the corporate reaction will be? Hell, at that stage, what do you think government reactions will be, and the legal ramifications thereof if the hackers are found guilty? I imagine it will be brutal, ugly, and something neither you nor I would be comfortable with. Mob anger and government responses are rarely small, measured, or careful; they will call for blood and accept lockdowns and new 'protective measures' that will make the most foul DRM look no worse than a code wheel for one of the old Gold Box D&D games. And if that happens, pray, who wins?
Agreed, and thank you for the debate and a look into your viewpoint. Here's hoping neither of our worst-case scenarios ever come even close to coming true.Therumancer said:Actually yes, I do think that employees at a company that does something like this that is well known should either quit or if they choose to stay be aware of what they are siding with and the risks they are taking. Unlike fantasy there is no such thing as an "antiseptic" conflict in real life where there isn't going to be collateral damage. In the real worldpoiuppx said:Actually, that's where you're wrong (and a bit hypocritical given you admit you have no skin directly in the game either other than ideology and the fear of corporate seisure of physical property, which is going pretty damn extreme into outcomes as well). Speaking as someone who has spent the last year and a half trying to break into the video game industry on the producer/QA track, yes, I am directly affected. Because this is rather personal for me, and I freely confess that. I don't agree with the logic that says everyone must burn because somehow this will lead to a Neuromancer-style cyberpunk dystopia of corporations owning your soul and leasing it back, as you seem afraid it will.Therumancer said:In fact I think the only reason why your being obstinate in opposing it is because you weren't affected.
What I agree with is an industry I give a damn about. I was born in 1985, so literally my life has been one giant timeline of the post-83 crash. Do I have misgivings about what Sony did with Other OS and why they did it? Hell yes. I think they were very short-sighted and should have considered the PR ramifications if nothing else, no matter what the reason they felt it had to be done. But the thing is, you keep treating Sony like a 'Too big to fail' recession-causing company. It's not. Not even close. Their failure or success directly impacts the industry, however.
And honestly... I don't get the mentality here. Are you suggesting that as soon as Other OS was pulled, regardless of any internal memos or whatever, the people working at Sony should have all quit and prayed there were a few million open jobs somewhere else? They should have stormed the corporate offices and killed the CEO? And really, a comparison to Enron of all things is pretty low. Do yourself a favor and look up one of the MANY documentaries on the environment there. The only company that even comes CLOSE to acting that way in the modern video game industry is Activision, and even they aren't making it standard business practice to screw everyone over... well, unless the rumors around Infinity Ward are right, in which case, strike that.
My point is, though, I get that we see this from remarkably different fronts. And honestly, I appreciate that. As I appreciate that you're willing to share your opinions with me at length like this. I respect you infinitly more than those who did this, actually. I may not agree with your logic, or your conclusions- and I damn well know you don't agree with mine -but you had the guts to put them forth and debate them publically, and articulate your viewpoints and concerns in a way that, were I more on the fence, could sway me. As it stands, you at the least gave me pause, regardless of my personal interest in this matter. And that's excellent. That is EXACTLY how this kind of conversation should take place. What these hackers did, however, IF it was motivated by social engineering efforts to chastise Sony's actions re: Other OS and Geohot, only hurts the narrative. That is my main point here; even if you agree with the logic underpinning this, the end result is poisonous and hurtful to everyone, especially their own purpose.
Consider; if the FBI and Homeland Security catches up with who did this, and after all this upheval they stand on a pedistal and say this is why, what do you think the public reaction will be? What do you think the corporate reaction will be? Hell, at that stage, what do you think government reactions will be, and the legal ramifications thereof if the hackers are found guilty? I imagine it will be brutal, ugly, and something neither you nor I would be comfortable with. Mob anger and government responses are rarely small, measured, or careful; they will call for blood and accept lockdowns and new 'protective measures' that will make the most foul DRM look no worse than a code wheel for one of the old Gold Box D&D games. And if that happens, pray, who wins?
it's a matter of degrees. sure, quitting a job on principle might not be easy, but then again getting laid off if the company does something like this and burns for it isn't easier either. Actually it's worse because it's easier to find a job when you already have one, than to wind up out on the street.
Simply put, saying that you should let companies engage in victimization because of collateral damage is wrong.
You are correct overall that it's going to be bad for the people that are involved if they happen to be caught and made to stand trial. That's one of the risks involved in something like this, regardless of the motives. That's why you don't see it too often, and why it's noteworthy when this kind of resistance happens. Most people will QQ but won't actually take action.
At any rate, we'll have to agree to disagree, I think we've both stated our positions as much as we can, and I don't think there is much more to be said on the subject. I am not the biggest Anonymous fan in the world, but think that this is a good thing and I hope they win on this front even if it causes collateral damage, since I think the issue is that important. You pretty much think the opposite. In the end what we think doesn't much matter, and only time will tell how it plays out. Whether it's over or there will be another attack, and if there is how far it will go, remains to be seen.