Aussie Gamer Loses PS3 Court Case Over 'Other OS' 206
dotarray writes "An Australian man who took Sony to court over the company's decision to remove Linux functionality from the PS3 console has now lost his claim, with the court clearing the manufacturer of any wrongdoing regarding the upgrade."
Is this any surprise? (Score:3, Insightful)
It's completely ridiculous, which shouldn't surprise anyone. We already know that going into court is a crapshoot, with somewhat random results, but the one thing that we can be certain of? Having money enough to have a team of attorneys permanently on staff (like Sony) is definitely going to help tug the randomness in your direction.
How could any court not view this as false advertising? My guess is that they have fresh Vaios and PS3s (i.e. hookers and blow) to spare.
Re:Is this any surprise? (Score:5, Informative)
It's not quite as simple as that for a number of reasons:
1. A number of countries have a system for dealing with claims with a low monetary value (which this would almost certainly fall under) and generally speaking this system is set up to make it practical for you or I to sue a huge company by limiting the amount of costs (and, for that matter, messing around) either party can incur.
2. "How could any court not view this as false advertising?" : Good question. IANAL, but I can think of three things: I seriously doubt many people genuinely used their PS3 for Linux - and Sony could easily dig up numbers to support that, the fact that the feature was removed in the update was well known and in the release notes and the update may well have shipped with a "regardless of what this does to your console, you can't sue us" disclaimer.
I would add that IMV the only thing worse than Sony doing this is that I haven't yet heard of a single legal case where the judge(s) involved seem to be taking it particularly seriously. I really don't like the idea of living in a world where a manufacturer can release a product with features X, Y and Z only to remove Z - even from items already sold - at a later date. Could be particularly interesting here in the UK where no matter what the manufacturer does, it's the retailer who's on the legal hook if they sell you something which doesn't perform as advertised.
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Yes, all Australian states have a small claims tribunal that handle claims up to a few thousand dollars and/or disputes with government departments. They are specifically designed for quick and cheap dispute resolution. As such Sony's legal army would be useless, they would basically be confined to barracks.
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Good question. IANAL, but I can think of three things: I seriously doubt many people genuinely used their PS3 for Linux - and Sony could easily dig up numbers to support that.
I don't think numbers using it should affect it. If you buy a device with a feature that you use that should be enough.
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I don't think numbers using it should affect it. If you buy a device with a feature that you use that should be enough.
Yes, we advertised that our pipes could handle 300 PSI but 99.9% of people who purchase our plumbing supplies use it at household water pressures. That someone would put a fluid at 250 PSI through our pipes is just silly.
Numbers can be justification for removing a feature from future models, but if it is sold with a feature and that feature is removed or fails to operate at that level then
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I seriously doubt many people genuinely used their PS3 for Linux
Funny, I seem to recall that from the start, the majority of PS3 owners were running GNU/Linux on their PS3s. I also seem to recall Sony dropping that capability in the new PS3 models to try and cut their losses. Maybe I need to get my memory checked though.
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Tell that to the United States Department of Defense [cnn.com].
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We have subscription accounting (Sarbanes-Oxley) for products for which the manufacturer is obligated to support the advertised feature-set and ongoing work.
It hardly seems like a stretch to hold manufacturers to their advertised add-ins (especially "free" ones that have their cost built into the cost of the device) for the reasonable life-time of the product.
Sony totally boned the PS3 lifetime, though. The degree of cluelessness with the little things and the amount of damage that they have done to such a
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Sony totally boned the PS3 lifetime, though.
But not in any sort of way they actually care about. The lifetime of a PS3 they care about is the amount of time you can use it to carry on consuming their content (ie, licensed PS3 Games and BlueRay Movies). Other crap you can do with the device that does not make them any money they don't care about.
Even on the PC Linux is a niche market amongst home users that carries very little commercial weight as a result. I bet on the PS3 it was even more so so when the Other OS feature became a security hole in the
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So Sony is making you choose between running other OS or playing new games and playing games you have already bought online.
Not exactly cut and dried. What Sony has done is wrong. I know why they did it. It may end up being the best move for them. It is still wrong and your statement that the update is not forced is wrong for a great many people.
The choice of do I want to use the system I paid for to do everything Sony promised
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The difference in userbase between the PS3 and 360 is negligible (35 million vs 40 million) as far as developers are concerned.
As far as Sony losing money on the PS3, that hasn't been the case since around march of this year in the USA, and a couple of years back in other regions where the PS3 is sold at a higher price. That article you linked is a bit old.
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The truth is that I am amazed the PS3 is still getting any game development anyway. It has long since been overshadowed by the XBox360 and Wii in terms of userbase.
Your information is out of date. The PS3 is right behind the 360. [wikipedia.org] The higher sales of the PS3 have allowed it to catch up to the 360, despite the yearlong headstart. Attach rates are also similar. [afterdawn.com]
The Wii of course, is in a different class.
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Umm, I'm not sure it's long since overshadowed, it has 38 million units sold compared to Xbox's 47 million. 9 million is a lot, but it isn't like the PS3 hasn't sold.
Also Sony get to ride the new 3d wave as the only console able to output 3d 720p games. I know a lot of people think it's going to fail, but we'll see on that front.
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Look at the date on that article.
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Sony totally boned the PS3 lifetime, though. The degree of cluelessness with the little things and the amount of damage that they have done to such a technically impressive platform is just mind-boggling.
I don't think anything Sony did will affect sales in the slightest. This is a non-issue as the vast majority of the users simply dont care that an obscure and little used piece of functionality was removed. It was simply not cost effective for Sony to keep supporting it.
This lawsuit was ridiculous in that the guy was bound to lose since Sony did nothing wrong legally.
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This is a non-issue as the vast majority of the users simply dont care that an obscure and little used piece of functionality was removed. It was simply not cost effective for Sony to keep supporting it.
This lawsuit was ridiculous in that the guy was bound to lose since Sony did nothing wrong legally.
So, if "vast majority" of Toyota owners no longer use cassette tape players, it would then be OK for Toyota to single-handedly rip them out when such cars are taken into scheduled maintenance? After all, it's a "non-issue" to most people, right?
The fact is - it was advertized and sold as a feature of PS3. Certain people bought it, in part, because it had that feature. It's unfair to remove it after sale. Just because you may not care, doesn't make it OK or legal to do. In fact, with that logic, they can rem
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Except in most jurisdictions Sony DID do something legally wrong. That is why in most of the EU, retailers selling PS3s have offered partial refunds upon request. That is just one example. Here is a link so you don't have to Google it:
http://www.tomshardware.com/news/PS3-playstation-Linux-Rebate-Amazon,10140.html [tomshardware.com]
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Sony totally boned the PS3 lifetime, though. The degree of cluelessness with the little things and the amount of damage that they have done to such a technically impressive platform is just mind-boggling.
XCP [wikipedia.org] showed them that idiotic customers and pwned governments will let them get away with anything they want. Sony is above all law, seemingly world-wide. I can't understand why anyone would buy computer gear from a company that roots its paying customers' computers. That just seems mind-bogglingly stupid to
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It's a bit of a weird situation for the law though, isn't it?
That sums it up beautifully.
While consumer law in many countries explicitly bars terms which say "you can't sue us", I seriously doubt it accounts for products which may be updated over the course of their lifetime in this fashion.
For one thing, much of it was probably written long before user-updateable firmware became common, in which case the idea that it might even be physically possible to disable a feature post-release would be totally alien.
Re:Is this any surprise? (Score:5, Insightful)
For one thing, much of it was probably written long before user-updateable firmware became common, in which case the idea that it might even be physically possible to disable a feature post-release would be totally alien.
That is the problem. The law doesn't currently consider the idea of upgradeable firmware. That doesn't change the fact that disabling a feature post-release is a dirty business tactic. There were a lot of people who did use the PS3 for Linux and gaming. It is not possible to continue to use the Playstation Network if you don't continually install the firmware upgrades. While they're saying that nobody is forcing consumers to upgrade to firmwares that drop the other OS support they're essentially locking people out of the online section if they don't. It's dirty and it should be illegal.
All we have here is a bunch of tech companies (Sony, Apple, etc) who are treating the device like they own it. They are operating it like the user is leasing it from them, which is not true. They're really exploiting the fact that the law hasn't kept up with the technology to be able to fuck everyone around.
The law will evolve, but it will take more than one guy in the small claims court. It'll take an army of highly paid lawyers. The lawyers will win in the short term but (hopefully) in the long term the law will start to catch up with the technology.
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For me, this is the critical issue.
If it was simply the case that he'd entirely voluntarily decided to update his firmware and not noticed the bit that said it was going to
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While they're saying that nobody is forcing consumers to upgrade to firmwares that drop the other OS support they're essentially locking people out of the online section if they don't. It's dirty and it should be illegal.
You should demand a full refund of all of your subscription fees for the online section.
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They're really exploiting the fact that the law hasn't kept up with the technology to be able to fuck everyone around.
The law will evolve
The law will evolve, but it will evolve to codify their right to fuck around with the console you own.
Isn't this the logical extension ?? (Score:2)
You're talking about Sony and others regarding the device as though "the user is leasing it from them" -- yet every time I look at intellectual property copyright, it sounds like they're implying just that! (You're not really buying the music/movie/software! You're simply paying for a license to use the content according to all the rules we've set forth! The physical media you received in the transaction is just the vehicle used to get the intellectual property from point A to B. It doesn't imply you re
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It is not possible to continue to use the Playstation Network if you don't continually install the firmware upgrades.
It is also not possible to continue to play new games, which also require you to install the newest version of the firmware.
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yeah, newer games can require a newer firmware version and possibly ship with the update right there on the disk
effectively sony is saying "games or linux, you chose", which is right in the face of the fact that it was sold as "games and linux"
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alien concept, I know!
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Why should I reward Sony by buying a second console (ignoring for the moment whether they actually make a profit on console sales, at the very least it inflates their userbase numbers) just because they screwed me over by trying to remove features from my first console?
More to the point, why should the solution to "Sony is removing a feature" be "Spend another $300+ on Sony hardware"? I already bought Sony hardware that did both, I shouldn't have to buy more Sony hardware just to continue doing what my har
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All the documentation there mentioned the trader, not the manufacturer. I'd assume that traders have some sort of agreement with their own suppliers, where that leaves them if the manufacturer decides to retrospectively remove features is anyone's guess.
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Did Sony, initially, advertise falsely? Not at the star
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Call it theft or vandalism.
Nope, it's called a trojan horse, virus, root kit etc....
My set-top box upgraded without asking me.
Basically my set-top box was hacked.
There are laws against this kind of thing in the UK. 'Hacking' laws.
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My set-top box upgraded without asking me.
This ^^^
It nearly always boils down to a couple of basic principles;
Does the user/owner control a device he has purchased and "owns" by any other legal measure, or does whoever made it? Furthermore, is it fair that the user is told he owns the device when it's advantageous to the maker, but is told they don't own it when it comes to things that the maker is opposed to owners doing or doesn't want to pay/be liable for?
These are the clear issues they'd like to muddy
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maybe if linux users were not just all anti-copyright thieves and pirates, [...]
Hi, I am a Linux user and I am anti-copyright and anti-"Intellectual Property" in general. But I have never stolen anything nor raided any ships. Oh, you mean illegal copying of software... Well, since I use Linux I do not need to make illegal copies, nor do I have the time for that because free software is released at such a fast rate that I have no hope to learn to use all of it in my lifetime. (Apologies for feeding the troll.)
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I think you missed the point. Linux users don't usually have to steal (pirate) software because the software that is out there to pirate is most likely not something that would run on Linux...
So calling Linux users "pirates" is asinine at best.
His point has nothing to do with equivalent Linux games in general.
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WTF? Why would I want to pirate software when all the software I need comes with the OS for free?
You're AC because you couldn't pass /.'s IQ test to get your account? It's a REALLY easy test...
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The keyword here is "many".
Sony have sold several million PS3s. They've probably sold a few thousand that wound up being used for Linux.
Re:Is this any surprise? (Score:5, Insightful)
It's completely ridiculous, which shouldn't surprise anyone.
The ridiculous and surprising part is his legal defense:
"He explains that he believed a warning about the update, downloaded on April 1st, was just an April Fool's joke."
If I were the judge, I would have adjourned the case until April 1st and then handed down the victory to Sony then.
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It's completely ridiculous, which shouldn't surprise anyone.
The ridiculous and surprising part is his legal defense:
"He explains that he believed a warning about the update, downloaded on April 1st, was just an April Fool's joke."
If I were the judge, I would have adjourned the case until April 1st and then handed down the victory to Sony then.
That and his damages... Renting a laptop? The PS3 was not a laptop. He should have gone for the price of a PS3. Then he would have won. Less money, but more than he got!
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skipped installing the linux-killing update
How is it as a linux box? I've heard that it is quite limited, but I am not sure how (HDD? memory?) And how come you haven't powered on, does it contact the mothership (sony) looking for an update? Can that part be disabled?
Otherwise, I will be looking for these on the auction sites, if it's worth it. I'd appreciate your opinion or comments on this aspect of the box.
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I used Linux largely for Cell development when I worked at Sony, but also for occasional browse-on-the-TV stuff.
It's a memory-constrained box, though there is a bit of hackery available (and in use, on mine) to use graphics memory for a little large-page help. The HDD is a laptop drive, and everything works fairly well with a wireless keyboard/mouse. You can rip/archive Blu-Ray (which I've never done) and do most Linuxy things. Still, Eclipse, big GIMP work, and anything else that leans hard on memory is
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the PS3 only has 256MB of ram, and no access to the GPU* apart from frame buffer, and very little of the shelf stuff can make use of the SPUs. In fact you can't even use mplayer to play bluray movies, for lack of hardware aceleration. If you want to write software for the Cell, or just browse the web without flash in linux, it shoudl work great. If you were thinking "OOO OOO HTPC" better go buy an ION/Atom and use that for the same money, or an older intel mac mini and a broadcom crystal HD card.
*Well i hea
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That being said I think its a shitty move on their part, but far from illegal unless they
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I don't believe this is false advertising, as no one who purchased a console before the update was required to install the update
Unless they want to play new games, new BluRay movies, or continue to access PSN. If you don't install the update, you lose these features (which the console was advertised as having), if you don't install it then you lose the ability to run Linux (which the console was advertised as having). Whichever choice you make, you lose some of the functionality that the console was originally advertised as having.
I hope that Microsoft and Nintendo will remember this for the next round of the console wars, and
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I hope that Microsoft and Nintendo will remember this for the next round of the console wars, and remind people that Sony doesn't sell you a console, it lends you one and reserves the right to disable arbitrary features in the future.
Or, more likely, they'll see this play out first. If Sony wins, or settles out of court for some pocket change, they'll start doing the exact same thing - "hey, we didn't know we could get away with this."
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Not that you need a PSN account to play your games, retrieve game patches, or firmware updates. So.. not at all like signing a contract to actually be able to move the car you purchased.
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newer games will also require the newer firmware, and even ship with the update on the disc
car analogy "either you agree to agree with any agreement we give you, or we wont allow your car to run on any newly built roads"
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Not that you need a PSN account to play your games
Some games require logging into PSN in order to play, either because A. they were previously purchased from PSN and use Assassin's Creed 2-style continuous Internet activation or B. their multiplayer modes require multiple consoles instead of splitting the screen.
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I do know this much : SONY has lost me as a customer forever. I may not be aware of every single piece of tech that they have their finger in, but you can bet if it stinks of them, it won't be in my shopping basket.
You mean the CD rootkit, the "secure" thumb drive rootkit, and the BluRay shenanigans weren't enough? I am a Linux geek, but this is no where near as bad as the other 3.
Very sad. (Score:5, Insightful)
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Justice by credit line
Another link (Score:5, Informative)
He should appeal (Score:2)
He no longer has what he paid for and Sony are responsible. They should have at least provided a method of restoring the functionality to how it was.
I must admit I'm surprised the ACCC took that stance, I'd really like to see more details.
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Is there even an option of appeal in small claims cases?
If there is, any idea how they work? is it just to another small claims court or does it get escalated to a higher court, and if so, do your potential liabilities increase should you lose there too?
I agree appealing is a smart option in this case, but I don't know if the appeals process for this sort of thing actually fairly caters to it or not?
Re:He should appeal (Score:5, Informative)
There's a forum linked elsewhere - in essence, Sony's argument was "you can't sue us, the EULA says so" and the judge agreed.
Analogy (Score:2)
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Oh, very much in so. An EULA is a blatant attempt to turn a business-to-consumer transaction (which in many countries has all sorts of legal protections) into the legal equivalent of a business-to-business transaction (which in many countries has very few legal protections - if you're a business you're meant to have the good sense to exercise due diligence and hire a lawyer if necessary).
What the world really needs is a judgement in a first-world country in a court which makes binding decisions acknowledgi
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Still, you all bought the damn thing knowing full well what was in the EULA. More fool you, firstly for not reading it and thinking "GTFO I'll buy a pretzel for the walk home" and also
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The kicker is that a judge sees it Sony's way. At least this was in Australia, so there's still some faint hope for the rest of us.
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Contract Law. You agreed to the EULA. No one forced you to buy the product. You could have taken one look a the EULA, and walked away saying "No thanks". Hell most people don't even read their insurance or mortgage agreements, let alone agreements for a PS3.
Problem is they have become so ubik these days, that there is some sort of EULA on everything now indemnifying companies from blame or litigation. Most of these are ridiculous in length. I mean the iTunes one is like 75 pages long, not to mention, WOW, o
This is theft or wilful damage (Score:2)
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I'm sorry, I think I missed the part of the article where they interviewed the Sony Killbot that was sent to this guy's house to mess with his PS3, can you link it?
(Serious Face) There was an update, he had to agree to an updated EULA before he downloaded. He misinterpreted the EULA as an April Fools joke. This is unfortunate, but ultimately his own damn fault for agreeing to something without understanding it. Nothing was stolen. Sony just pushed an update out to their OS. If he wants to run Linux so
Facepalm (Score:2, Interesting)
Okay I am really confused over all of these attempts to sue the manufacturers, maybe I'm missing something here. In the UK, if a product is not as described/fit for purpose among other things, the seller is liable (providing they're a business etc.). It's the same thing EU-wide (1999/44/EC), surely it's the same with Australia and North America?
Or am I wrong about the UK, and the manufacturer is also liable? Any British IANALs got some case or statute law that says that a buyer can sue a manufacturer for
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In the UK, the consumer only has a contract with the retailer they bought it from. The manufacturer is not liable.
People have been successful in the UK with a full or partial refunds. Amazon, GAME and HMV have given damages or full refunds to customers. £84 is what Amazon offer for a partial refund, and you get to keep the console.
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ahh for a refund, but i want to use the device i paid for, not return it. How does one go about doing that?
Re:Facepalm (Score:5, Informative)
I know you're trolling but let me explain why the UK does what it does.
The Sale of Goods act (1953) was brought into being to protect the consumer from shops palming off problems to the manufacturer. Your equipment is faulty? Send it back to the manufacturer. The book you bought has pages missing? Phone up the publisher to get it replaced. With this act the retailer is obliged to offer a replacement to the purchaser and it becomes the retailer's responsibility to get a replacement from the manufacturer. No flux capacitor required.
Re:Facepalm (Score:5, Insightful)
Indeed, and it makes the retailer less likely to do business with problem publishers/manufacturers, hence putting greater pressure on them than an individual by themselves could to rectify their poor business practices.
It's easy for a manufacturer to fob off multiple independent individuals, it's harder for them to fob off the retailers who are their gateway to getting their products to consumers in the first place.
Re:Facepalm (Score:5, Insightful)
The same act provides the shop with grounds to take it to the supplier. Basically, it means that the supply chain works both ways. You take the problem to the shop, and they are required by law to address it. They then take it to their supplier, who is required by law to address it. The complaints go from the customer to the retailer to the wholesaler and then to the supplier.
Part of the logic behind this is that you have a lot more leverage against the person closest to you in the supply chain. Your decision to boycott Sony and tell all of your friends to do so makes little difference to them. Your decision to boycott a local shop and tell all of your friends to do so makes a bigger difference to them. The shop's decision to boycott Sony won't make much difference, but their choice to switch wholesalers would. The wholesaler's decision to stop providing Sony products would be a much bigger threat to Sony than a single customer.
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The UK system is sensible ....
Instead of the customer suing Sony and having to wait months if not years for a resolution, and having to involve lawyers etc .... they pester the people they bought it from, who then can band together and hassle Sony ...
Who is Sony going to listen to, a small band of customers who are suing them, or a group of retailers, some of whom some of their best customers ?
The UK and European still holds Sony accountable, but stops each customer having to approach Sony and then sue th
The story so far (Score:5, Insightful)
A man walks into a shop:
"Hello, good sir. I would like to purchase a computer."
"Here you are. That will be $600"
"A fair deal indeed. Thank you."
[ Several months later, our hero comes home to find his computer missing. In its place is a short note and a paddle-ball ]
"Dear customer. We have taken the liberty of replacing your computer with a paddle-ball, as we learned that people were attempting to use their computers for non-paddleball-related activities."
The problem in a nutshell (Score:2)
A man walks into a shop:
"Hello, good sir. I would like to purchase a computer."
After which he points you to towards the Sony Vaio, the HP Pavilion, the Lenovo ThinkPad. Perhaps a Dell Inspiron if you a looking for a budget desktop.
He does not send you to the racks with the XBox 360, the Wii, and PS3.
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and? feature lists included "other OS". Shall I take a picture of my PS3 box that says it?
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You walk into a dealership of recreational vehicles.
You see an amphibious car on display. The head of the amphibious car manufacturing division has stopped by the dealership, and is extolling the features of it to customers.
"Drives on land! Operates in water like a boat!"
So you buy one.
After you buy it, you might use both features, you might not. But isn't it awesome knowing if you want to you can just drive down to the lake and go for a spin?
But then there's a knock on the door. A representative of the com
Poor Choice of Damages (Score:3, Informative)
It says he sued to get back $800 (AU), which was the cost of renting a laptop for some unspecified period of time.
He should have sued for the retail price of the PS3.
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yeah, that was what I thought. It immediately looks like a time-wasting idiot-case when he seems to want a resolution which (a) let's him keep his PS3 as a gaming machine and (b) make Sony pay for him to have a seperate computer as well (and as the sort of nerdy type who installs Linux on a PS3, he probably has a seperate computer anyway). He'd probably have been more successful if he'd demanded they take the product back since they were crippling it.
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Is there some way to specifically ask the court to restore the feature? Because this is what is really needed here. Sony promised it, then they took it away, they should be made to give it back.
To use a car analogy (Score:4, Interesting)
Customer: I bought this Sony Car because it had headlights. I need headlights so I can drive my car at night.
Sony: We removed the headlights feature at your last service because headlights can be used to flash oncoming drivers. But removing headlights has made your Car lighter, so it can go faster and use less fuel. We hope you like the changes.
Customer: I can't use my Car any more because you took the headlights away, thus it's no longer roadworthy and it would be illegal for me to drive it. Give me back my headlights, and pay $800 for the rental car I've had to use in the meantime.
Sony: No.
Judge: No.
Rest of the world: Dumb-asses.
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Customer: When they called me and offered to remove my headlights, I only agreed because I thought it was a joke!
Slashdot: SOOONY BLOOOOOD!
Rest of the world: Dumb-asses.
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Correct analogy would be that they would only service the car if they also could remove the headlights.
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And a more correct analogy would be that instead of headlights they removed the part of the car that also makes it work as a boat. Still perfectly capable of working as a car, but no longer able to perform a seldom used and impractical "other" service.
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Actually, it's more like:
"When they called and offered to remove my headlights, I only agreed because it was the only way I could use the petrol and tires I'd already installed; or any future petrol or tires I may need. Also, they'd stop letting me drive on the Interstate if I declined."
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Customer: I bought this Sony Car because it had headlights.
Sony: What? This is a gaming machine. Yeah, we put headlights on it because it looks good, but it's not meant for strapping to the hood of your car. Are you insane?
Customer: Linux!
Sony: Uh, okay... Incidentally, due to people cheating, you're going to have to choose between using our completely cost-free online gaming network, and your "headlights".
Customer: Give me $800 and free car!!
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Another car analogy:
Customer: I'd like to buy a car.
Sony: Sure!
Customer: Can I install Linux on this and use it as a server?
Sony: Yeah, you can do whatever you want, now sign this fifteen page contract!
Customer: Do I have to?
Sony: Yes, but don't worry. It's just there for decoration.
Customer: Ok.
Six months later...
Customer: You removed Linux from my car...
Sony: Yeah, we just realized it's a car, and you might be using Linux to add features that we should be charging you for.
Customer: That's not fair.
Sony: Remember the contract? It says I can do this...It's right after the part that says that I get to have sex with your mother.
Customer: What?
Sony: Raising someone who would sign such an agreement was taken as consent. It's all legal.
Customer: I'm taking you to court.
Sony: We have fifteen lawyers, do you need a ride up there?
Later
Judge: So, this "car" you speak of...It's like an electric horse, right?
Customer: But it runs Linux...
Judge: And as for your mother...Well, I'm pretty sure that would be illegal, except that this guy sells electronics, and current contract laws don't say anything about "rape by an electronics salesman"....I guess we'll have to wait for the law to catch up with the technology on that one.
Customer: Does this mean "no Linux"?
Judge: Boy, I don't know what the hell you just said, but I like you. Now get outta my court room, you little scamp.
Question (Score:2)
Why is it that Sony first allowed Linux on PS3 (and earlier PS's too), and there were even supercomputers built with PS3's, and that later Sony decides to disallow that support completely? Why the sudden change?
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Why is it that Sony first allowed Linux on PS3 (and earlier PS's too), and there were even supercomputers built with PS3's, and that later Sony decides to disallow that support completely? Why the sudden change?
They allowed it because of the significant number of people who said they would only buy a PS3 if it could run Linux, and they wanted to deny the sales to Microsoft. Linux has long been used inside Sony (and in dev kits) for Playstation game development so it was probably a relatively trivial operation. The Hypervisor is probably already used to provide security (anti-cheat, anti-hack, anti-copy) protection for games so it didn't have to be added for Linux. They took it away because it could trivially be us
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George Hotz managed to get to ring 0 of the hypervisor. Basicly he had full control of the hardware, or enough control to get there. Now he still needed to boot gameOS to make any games work, but sony probably figured it was just a mater of time before he reverses the gameOS too. His blog has since become invite only it would seem.
Shortly after GeoHot annoced this sony announced the removal of "otherOS" as it was a security problem.
Here's what I think of it, should anyone care (Score:2)
No surprise. (Score:2)
Not to put too fine a point on it, but is anyone surprised that the government of Australia is making (more) stone-age-stupid decisions regarding technology? Their track record on all things related to high tech demonstrates institutionalized ignorance. This is just another example of Australia's willful lack of understanding of the modern Internet-enabled world.
We'll just add this one to the list.
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So much for the internet creating a space
Judgement apparently not posted yet (Score:3, Informative)
When it is, I'd expect it to appear here [sa.gov.au].
Re:Appeal posible (Score:4, Informative)
Is there? I've spent a frustration 30 minutes bouncing from link to link looking for some actual details without much luck.
Yeah, the details are rather scant. But the decision was apparently made by a magistrate, which means he filed either in a local court or in the federal magistrates court. Either of these can be appealed (*almost* automatically) to a higher court, if he chooses to do so.
Re: (Score:2, Interesting)
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"Personally I lost all respect for Sony with the whole rootkit deal."
Most people don't care. It's a TOY, it plays games, it's a trifle.
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It's a TOY, it plays games, it's a trifle.
Well I still think Sony should get their just desserts.
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I know a lady who saved and made sacrifices for six months in order to buy a PS3. For her (and others who don't make much money), it was obviously more than a trifle.