Error Code (aka The Great PSN Easter Outage of 2011)

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From LBP2's FB page"Warning!
Fake PSN emails are being sent out. They are using [email protected].

Copy and paste this for others to be aware."

so now there using there own damn e-mail accounts to send fake sh**t!


FYI. That's not an official FB page. This is the official one.

http://www.facebook.com/LittleBigPlanet2

I have not heard or read anywhere else about fake e-mails. The only one I have received for them is the official statement they sent to everyone.
 
As the PSN outage and data leak drag on, Bloomberg has posted a pair of articles that add to the ongoing saga. First, the news service reports that financial companies Wells Fargo, American Express, and MasterCard have seen "no unauthorized activity relating to Sony." The news comes shortly after Sony announced that all PSN credit card information had been encrypted during the time of the leak and that there was "no evidence" that any had been stolen.


Kaz Hirai's handling of the PSN crisis may determine if he succeeds Sir Howard Stringer as Sony Corp. CEO.

The credit card companies' revelation is a rare bright spot in the crisis, which is weighing heavily on the brow of one particular Sony executive. Bloomberg also reports that Kaz Hirai, who became head of Sony's entire consumer electronics business on April 1, is under a magnifying glass to see how he handles the ongoing debacle. The scrutiny is particularly intense as Hirai has extolled a plan to use the PlayStation Network as the basis of a content store that will extend to other Sony devices, such as HDTVs and Blu-ray players.
"Almost everything Hirai has been trying to do has an element of network," Mitsubishi UFJ Morgan Stanley Securities analyst Masahiko Ishino told the news service. "Sony's strategy to connect its products through network is very crucial for the company's transformation. Sony may struggle if the business gets disrupted."
How Hirai copes with the PSN outage--which has already sparked government investigations and civil lawsuits--will likely affect his chances of succeeding current Sony Corp. CEO Sir Howard Stringer. As part of the announcement of Hirai's promotion, Stringer himself said that he was the frontrunner. "This is an opportunity for the board to watch Hirai-san and judge his performance," said Stringer.
Unfortunately for Sony, the market is already weighing in on the PSN outage. Today, Sony shares fell 4.5 percent to 2,260 ($27.71) on the Tokyo Stock Exchange. It was the largest decline for the company since the tragic earthquake and tsunami hit Japan in mid-March.
http://www.gamespot.com/news/6310570.html

So far so good. CC wise that is.
 
Im calling BS. They claimed the site was down for maintenance a week ago, that was NEVER true and they knew it. Sony thought it was something they could just clean up themselves and they were wrong, now they are doing spin control while their stock plummets.

I believe Sony actually admitted it with the timeline they reported, without ever saying they lied. They knew it was hackers since last week. They didn't tell us that last week, though.

You're right. My guess is that they thought that maybe they could lower the boom, and maybe clean it up within that week and save themselves from the embarrassment of having to admit exactly what happened. But, with looking at how bad it actually was...had to fess up. The problem I have with all it, is they should have let us know it was an intrusion from day one, when they found out.

I've heard on a few podcasts prior to this happening, and that link that provided to the supposed chatlogs, about how I guess Sony underestimated the abilities of outside forces because they're methods of protection aren't up to snuff. I don't know how true that even is, though.
 
Just read this. Pretty eye opening.

(Reuters) - The hacking of Sony Corp's PlayStation Network has earned a place in the annals of Internet crime.
That's partly because of the massive size of the data breach -- information about 77 million customer accounts was stolen. It is also because Sony bothered to disclose the attack at all.
The bulk of attacks on corporate and governmental computer networks go unreported because victims want to avoid the embarrassment and public scrutiny that come with acknowledging that their systems have been hacked.
Companies fear that their stock price might take a hit or that their brand might be damaged after news of an intrusion, said Jerry Dixon, a former government official who was instrumental in setting up the U.S. government's crime-fighting Computer Emergency Readiness Team.
"Everybody's network is getting hammered all the time," said Dixon, director of analysis at Team Cymru, a non-profit security research group.
Sony shut down the network on April 19 after discovering the breach, one of the biggest online data infiltrations ever. But it was not until Tuesday that the company said the system had been hacked and that users' data could have been stolen.

In the United States, several members of Congress seized on the breach, in which hackers stole names, addresses and possibly credit card details. One U.S. law firm filed a lawsuit in California on behalf of consumers.
Democratic Senator Richard Blumenthal of Connecticut called on the Justice Department to investigate the matter.
The FBI launched an inquiry and urged anybody with information about the attack to contact an agency hotline (+1 858-565-1255).

CODE OF SILENCE
Experts say that many companies only disclose break-ins when they are required to do so by government regulations that say they must tell customers whose data was compromised.
In many cases companies seek to keep the matter quiet by telling individual customers of the problem without issuing a public statement like the one from Sony this week. (bit.ly/kik7DC)
The publicity over the break-in has exposed Sony to global legal scrutiny, with officials from Hong Kong to London and Washington looking into the breach.
Sony's PlayStation Network, a service that produces an estimated $500 million in annual revenues, provides access to online games, movies and TV shows. Nine out of 10 of PlayStation's users are based in the United States or Europe.
Security experts say that companies that are attacked remain silent most of the time.
For example, 85 percent of some 200 companies in electricity-producing industries said that their networks had been hacked, according to a survey released this month by security software maker McAfee Inc and the non-profit Center for Strategic and International Studies. Yet utilities rarely disclose such attacks.
One in four of those companies in the McAfee/CSIS study reported that they had been victims of extortion campaigns from hackers who had broken into their networks. (tinyurl.com/3vgp5us)
In many cases, intrusions go undetected by the victim company, leaving the firm and its customers completely unaware that criminals have access to their sensitive data.

"Everybody's data is at risk. We've all got to worry about our personal information, wherever it may be," said Josh Shaul, chief technology officer for Application Security Inc.

SPEAR "PHISHING"
Sony said it had encrypted all credit card numbers, which would make it extremely difficult for hackers to access that data. But criminals might use other personal information that was not encrypted to launch scams.
With birthdates, email addresses and home addresses, hackers can launch spear "phishing" attacks that are targeted at those individuals.
Spear phishing refers to attacks that are customized to each individual target. Hackers draft emails that contain enough personal information to persuade the victim to let down their defenses, which can be enough to get them to click on a link that downloads malicious software onto their personal computer.
 
[YT]Cwn4R_GexLM&feature=share[/YT]
 
damn hackers, this just means that in the future, especially the next ps will have paid internet services and it'll be that much more expensive so they can finance their security. i really hope the FBI questions the hell out of that Geohot guy.
 
I really don't get why people are jumping on the anti Sony bandwagon. Especially for not disclosing the attack when it happened. For one, when it happened, they had no idea to what extent they were hacked, and as soon as they did understand, they told us. It's not like they were sitting on their asses, twiddling their thumbs for a week. Sony busted their asses to find out what happened, how it happened, and are now doing everything they can to fix it and make sure it doesn't happen again. Like the article above said, most companies dont say anything at ALL, and yet Sony told us everything they nknew as soon as there was actually something to be said. Yes, it sucks, and sony's security needs to be put under a microscope to prevent future issues, but it is not like They asked to be hacked and lose the faith of it's customers.

Hindsight is always 20/20, and it's quite easy for us to sit here and think that we know what happened and what Sony did or did not do, and it's easy for us to cry foul and point blame at Sony for this It's easy, but that doesn't mean it's the correct reaction. Suing Sony is utterly ******ed and won't do any good. For one, every user had to sign an agreement saying Sony isn't liable for these things. Secondly, kicking a dog (sony) when he's down will not help the situation. It will only keep Sony from being able to focus all it's resources on correcting this attack and safeguarding itself, and us, from future attacks.

We live in a world were hacks are an everyday occurrence; it's part of the risk you have to be willing to take if you want to live in a computerized life. If you don't like the rules, don't play the game.
 
The hackers didn't do it for some sense of sticking it to the man, they just did it for the notoriety, so they can say they were able to do it.
 
I just hope they get everything up and ready by Monday... That would be sweet
 
FYI. That's not an official FB page. This is the official one.

http://www.facebook.com/LittleBigPlanet2

I have not heard or read anywhere else about fake e-mails. The only one I have received for them is the official statement they sent to everyone.

i got these the other day, has it been confirmed if it's a fake or not. do find it a bit strange they would send out a plain text e-mail
 
Yeah, the problem with that is there is no real proof. Just a bunch of hackers talking smack. Time will tell I suppose.
 
Yea, it's not certain, but it's better to be aware that it's a possibility.
 
Well this situation just gets better and better. There may be no real proof but these hackers apparently know their stuff. I wouldn't be surprised if they have this kind of info.

I believe IF, IF these *****ebags have CC/BC info that Sony's really going to pay a price. It kind of sucks since they didn't really do much other than get hacked Like GeoHot said though, Sony kept hiring more lawyers when they really needed to hire good security experts.
 
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