You all know that PSN has been down for several days now, and Sony is blaming hackers for this outage, but is that the truth? According to a different source, PSN has been down in order to prevent piracy, and not due to hackers’ attack.
It seems that both Sony and PlayStation 3 users are having problems with the PlayStation Network. The PlayStation Network has been down for several days now, and it looks like the cause of PSN’s outage has been an outside attack.
You will remember George “Geohot” Hotz, the famous PS3 hacker that was being sued by Sony for cracking their firmware? Well, it appears that Hotz and Sony have achieved a settlement and the case is now closed.
The hacking community doesn’t take lightly on Sony’s legal actions against hackers, so it appears that hackers have united and are ready to strike out at Sony. War between Sony and hackers are still on going and have been so for some time, and after Sony took legal actions against George Hotz, also known as Geohot, and Graf_Chokolo, it appears that hackers have been taking action against Sony lately.
Marvel VS Capcom 3 has reached 2 million games shipped worldwide already. This sequel came out eleven years after the first video game. A lot of people are still interested in this classic game where you get to smash characters with super heroes or other people in the video game.
As for Sony’s gaming consoles, both PlayStation Portable and PlayStation 2 are outdated by now, but that doesn’t mean that they’re dead. In fact, the modding community has made something that allows you to play your PlayStation 2 in a portable way.
Since Sony updated its PlayStation firmware to v3.56, the hacking community has been having all sorts of problems with Sony, now hackers have found a way to switch back to the older firmware.
The latest firmware v3.55 on the PlayStation 3 was hacked in no time since its release, but Sony isn’t taking kindly to jailbreakers and hackers anymore, and since Sony can change the latest firmware remotely at any time, hackers have decided to switch back to the older version of firmware. Continue reading »












