Zanchief wrote:Not sure I can get behind these morons just because Pay Pal are a bunch of douche bags.
Anti-establishment is fun when you’re like 15 but I think it might be time to grow up.
so what you're saying is everyone should just bend over and take whatever companies like Sony give you?
they're just trying to make a point. i didn't know this until i read it in my game informer and i'm not sure most people know what really happened with sony's network so here, it sheds some light on Anonymous, if you didn't already know (this is not verbatim unless it's in quotes):
originally the ps3 was supposed to have a bootable linux for hackers. they decided to close that up and george hotz opened the root key and sony sued him. they took his youtube account, his twitter account, and all of the same info for all of the friends Hotz was hacking with (fail0verflow). they also tracked everyone that visited his website. basically an "unforgivable offense against free speech and internet freedom"
Anonymous responded with "Your corrupt business practices are indicative of a corporate philosophy that would deny consumers the right to use products they have paid for, and rightfully own, in the manner of their choosing. Perhaps you should alert your customers to the fact that they are apparently only renting your products?"
four servers rebooted unexpectedly and were taken offline by Sony. the next day, six more. then Sony pulled the plug. they said credit cards were compromised but no attacks resulted. it took Sony 7 days to let the public know what happened. Connecticut senator Richard Blumenthal sent a letter to Sony of America and a lawsuit was filed in California against SoA
there had been attempted network penetration for something like 20 days until they found the weakness they were looking for. Sony never noticed these attempts. also Sony's server software wasn't up to date, and "there was a way for custom firmware to subvert PSN's security"
when Sony tried to bring it back online they were so sloppy that a third party could manipulate the URL of an account reset and block the original user from his/her account.............
anyways, this could've happened to nintendo or microsoft because they're all basically the same. it happens on the PC all the time. honestly i like seeing this happen. they make so much money off of nothing that i'm glad there's a projected $170 million loss due to this breach