PS3 hacked yet again, with PSN access
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Entirely different system with an entirely different puzzle for the hackers to need to solve. If this had happened in the first or second year of the PS3s lifespan then maybe it might've been a bigger blow. Sony has already made their money from the PS3, it's on its way out now.Comment
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Put it another way:
Sony now has to spend more creative energy protecting against pirates in the PS4. That will likely, like shoe-horned multiplayer, come at the cost of something else. Piracy runs deep and affects many aspects of game design, development, and production, so I just don't get the "Oh well" approach that some gamers have.Comment
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Which leads me to your latter point. Moral relativism is for douchebags, assholes, and in this case, thieves. Don't sling me this nonsense about how piracy isn't morally wrong. A person either spent their own money, or was given money, to create a product, and people that pirate it are then stealing that product. It's called piracy for a reason. Is it somehow different because you're stealing something from the internet instead of walking into a store and taking something from the shelf? Piracy is stealing. Stealing is morally wrong, regardless of what legal system you're working in.
i can point to things like downloading music...or recording a burned cd or coping a movie to a video tape. thats all copyright infringement and identical to pirating
It affects every gamer because it damages the creativity of the designer/developer because they know how easy it is to do, and how many people are willing to do it. How long it has been happening is neither here nor there. Gaming is a young industry that is already feeling the pressure of piracy which is why you see all the sequels that you yourself bitch about. Iteration is cheaper than creating a new IP, and in a world where you have to assume people will pirate, why not iterate? You'll still make money, despite people stealing from you (and you'll certainly make more money than you would off of a new IP).
developers dont make new IP's because they cost to much to produce. at the same time they run the risk of it being a failure. Thats why they make sequels. they can design an engine and re use it 5 or 6 times by making modifications to it...ala COD and madden. its naive to think devs make sequels because they fear pirates. EA has been using the repeat model for 20 years and as the cost of development has gone up, other companies have followed suit. its about being profitable in an increasing expanding marketComment
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This isn't about the "blow" to Sony though. I'm not sure where the disconnect is here. Piracy is bad and I don't see why a new system would mean less piracy, and if you get that, I don't see why the PS4 is relevant. The piracy on the PS3 is every bit as relevant as the sales on the PS3 to Sony when it comes to the PS4.
Yes, this sucks for Sony and game developers that this hack has gone public, but it would've been much worse had this happened without a new system already on the horizon.[REDACTED]Comment
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your opinion is not fact seth. your moral values do not represent those of the rest of the world. your entitled to your opinion, and your beliefs are your beliefs.
i can point to things like downloading music...or recording a burned cd or coping a movie to a video tape. thats all copyright infringement and identical to pirating
its easy to pirate a game on the consoles? ive checked, its rather complicated and a pain in the ass. gaming has been around about 35 years. idk how thats young.
developers dont make new IP's because they cost to much to produce. at the same time they run the risk of it being a failure. Thats why they make sequels. they can design an engine and re use it 5 or 6 times by making modifications to it...ala COD and madden. its naive to think devs make sequels because they fear pirates. EA has been using the repeat model for 20 years and as the cost of development has gone up, other companies have followed suit. its about being profitable in an increasing expanding market
As for the rest, I think that fear of pirates generates a LOT of fear in new creation. We can agree to disagree on this, but just look at the numbers on new/iterative movies as piracy increases. Of course it makes more sense to them in an expanding market to take the safe way out. It also makes more sense to take the safe way out because pirating exists.
To Villain: I think there is a big difference between now and the launch of the PS3. And I'm not sure what we're arguing about here, to be honest. I think this is bad for Sony regardless, and terrible for the industry as well. Hackers could take another 6 years to make the PS4 pirate-friendly, but that is beside my point of the fact that now Sony has to worry about pirates in general when designing everything.
I never spoke to this hack in particular, I just hate hackers and pirates in general because they ruin it for everyone that isn't just looking for a free ride.Comment
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You think: "this hack and ensuing piracy of games will kill console gaming much in the same way that PC gaming was killed."
I think: "since this hack happened with the PS4 already on the way, it will not kill console gaming"[REDACTED]Comment
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Put it another way:
Sony now has to spend more creative energy protecting against pirates in the PS4. That will likely, like shoe-horned multiplayer, come at the cost of something else. Piracy runs deep and affects many aspects of game design, development, and production, so I just don't get the "Oh well" approach that some gamers have.Comment
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I never claimed that this would kill console gaming. I really don't even know what we're arguing about here. I don't think this is a good thing for console gaming, do you?
EDIT -- Do you think that Sony execs are just chilling saying "PS4 is aight" or do you think that they're probably now scared shitless that their next console might be susceptible to this? It's not like Sony as a corporation is in the 90's or early 2000's where they can just light cigars with dollar bills.Comment
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