Sony Marketing Man Tweets PS3 Master Key 351
An anonymous reader writes "Sony Marketing Man, Kevin Butler's official Twitter feed retweets a post by @exiva that posts the PS3 Master key. Kevin Butler who has over 69,000 followers tweet read (The tweet now deleted): '@TheKevinButler Lemme guess... you sank my Battleship? RT @exiva: 46 DC EA D3 17 FE 45 D8 09 23 EB 97 E4 95 64 10 D4 CD B2 C2 Come at me, @TheKevinButler'" Here is a screenshot of the tweet.
I think (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:I think (Score:5, Insightful)
Can't be helped.
If console makers give up on securing their consoles with these fairly non-intrusive DRM and leave their consoles wide open like the PC, it's only common sense to expect PC like DRM from games.
Even if Sony, Big-N and MS does nothing to enforce copy protection, the game publishers will add their own.
IMO it's kind of a pick your poison situation.
Have the console maker do it via locking down their console or have the game publishers make a crazy mess of it.
Re:I think (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:I think (Score:4, Insightful)
I don't keep up on 360 hacks but to my knowledge MS didn't have their signing key compromised though.
The only hacks I know of are messing with the DVD drive to play pirated games. Has anyone really gotten homebrew to run on that thing?
by putting in fixes and banning consoles and user accounts that break the EULA by hacking the system
I believe Sony would have fix it if they could - they did it with the PSP and the various hacks (etc the first PSP hack that exploited a bug in the TIFF viewer lib).
With the signing key in the wild, custom firmware that can evade detection won't be hard. Banning will be of limited effectiveness.
XNA (Score:5, Informative)
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Other OS was also a sandbox, and it was free. The applications you create to run either directly on Other OS or on top of Linux can also be freely distributed.
You must pay for XNA if I'm right, and there are "restrictions" to how apps are distributed.
Correct me if I'm wrong.
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Yeah, but the Other OS sandbox prevented it from accessing the GPU which made it completely unsuitable for homebrew games. The XNA dev kit is free, and games created with it can be freely distributed on windows computers. Distributing on XBox live requires a $99/year subscription, but that is pretty cheap for what you get. If you sell your game for $5, it only takes 20 sales to pay it off. Microsoft also does a good job of promoting good homebrew games. My only complaint about it is that it isn't compatible
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And as far as "limited" goes, for most people just creating games for fun and the hell of it ... the only boundary has been time.
There are plenty of other boundaries [pineight.com]. All code must be verifiably type-safe IL, which rules out porting games written in standard C++. (The verifiably type-safe subset of C++/CLI is incompatible with standard C++.) Games may include text only in a handful of languages, which rules out games designed for teaching other languages or RPGs where a character encounters a village of NPCs who aren't fluent in the common tongue and learning their language is a quest. And until XNA 4 introduced the "dynamic sound ef
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Then they should be checking for modified game executables and LV2 syscall hacks and little else. Checksum game data files as well if you want to check for cheats beyond piracy. Use one of those rootkit features supposedly added to 3.56 to do so, if you'd like.
Any pirate game is either going to have an LV2 syscall hack in place (to redirect /dev/bdvd to another folder, this is how backup managers work) or have a modified executable (to make it look at some other location in place of /dev/bdvd). Anything
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One thing is denying access to services if the user doesn't follow the EULA.
Another thing entirely is to modify the user's system if he doesn't follow the EULA.
Technically and logically, that's no different from end-users modifying and disabling the manufacturers servers if they find the manufacturer in violation of an agreement.
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If you are referring to "Other OS", it's not targeting specific users because of EULA violations, it was patching of a "security" hole that effected all users.
Sony probably rather not do it, but it was either that or let people like Geohot do what they want with the hypervisor.
Game developers will not be happy, neither will gamers when they see rampant cheating online - both are their main source of income BTW.
They picked their poison, and frankly I don't blame them for the choice they made.
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but it never gets in the way of me using the console as Microsoft presented it when I purchased it.
Exactly. Don't expect Linux to ever be presented on a console again. Ever.
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Appropriate? If they're damaging the end users console by taking away features and preventing it from being fully utilized then no, it's not appropriate and MS should be sued. You can't just ban consoles because you don't like what the owner was choosing to do with it.
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If all consoles had something like that I bet piracy would go down just because people developing homebrew wouldn't have to punch holes that pirates can crawl through.
In theory, that is.
See Geohot.
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Wasn't geohot's original hack to get at the video hardware that was explicitly disabled in OtherOS, which involved a hole that pirates could crawl through and geohot knew that?
As in, Sony inherently crippled homebrew, people developing homebrew punched a hole that pirates could crawl through, so Sony removed the ability for homebrewers to do anything by removing OtherOS entirely, causing new holes to be punched?
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Crippled yes, but it was still there.
If you want an uncrippled platform, feel free to buy a PC.
You have to understand they are not a charity, they have to make money off the device somehow, and that "how" was through licensed games - the video hardware was how they got people to sign up for licenses.
Consoles work on the razor and blade model, it's the way things evolved.
Consoles have to be cheap (look what happened with the $600 PS3), so they are sold either at a loss or barely break even (manufacturing isn
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Well then, maybe the razor and blade model needs to be replaced with something more sustainable.
Make the console $800, but the games $40. Then Sony doesn't need to worry about licensing and royalties... oh, but wait, this is Sony we're talking about. They love royalties, fuck.
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Sony is making it inconvenient for you to use the PS3 no matter what you do.
how am i inconvenienced if i never run a pirated game, or try to hack ps3 to run homebrew software (something it was never supposed to do)?
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"If all consoles had something like that I bet piracy would go down just because people developing homebrew wouldn't have to punch holes that pirates can crawl through."
The XBox360 seems to help your argument. They have a program in place to let homebrew developers write for the console -- and as far as I know, the 360 hasn't been hacked yet. Of course, it could be that they just have better security than the others.
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I think they gave up on that. They have released homebrew-blocking updates several times but the latest version of the firmware has been out and compromised for a long time now.
With the Wii it's actually quite involved to get games running off the HD, involving multiple steps, multiple component installs, and you need to start with one of about 3 possible games that contain a glitch (there was a gameless one, but that got patched).
The ps3 is different in that respect - install custom firmware, install game
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Then just do.
I keep see people like you posting in Sony related news threads.
What does it matter to you if you are boycotting them already?
Re:I think (Score:4, Informative)
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Fair enough.
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Re:I think (Score:4, Informative)
Meh, vaio are good, but not the only decent laptop.
The tvs are expensive compared to the likes of Samsung
There's honestly not much to pick between Xbox and PS3 IMHO.
DS and derivatives have WAAAAY more market than PSP...
In the current market, you can easily get away from Sony products without much compromise.
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Best pro Video? yes sony.
Best consumer? HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA!
Panasonic or LG Plasmas and LCD's blow the doors off of sony in fact LG utterly owns by continuing to have rs232 control for those of us that have real home theater setups (crestron,AMX,Control4), Sony BLuRay players are bottom of the barrel. Sony Vao pc's and laptops are craptastic compared to panasonic, toshiba, lenovo, and even dell.. they are better than HP, but even ASUS is better than HP.
There is NOTHING Sony has that is "better" even
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Er, why not? I've ignored Sony for years and I still buy a fair share of electronics. I would strongly disagree with you that they make the best of anything (except maybe gaming console, but I've still never owned a PS of any kind). 20 years ago, they used to make the best TV's. That's not the case anymore. And they've never made the best MP3 player, audio equipment, photography gear, or PCs.
I'm not sure ho
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As I said, in reply to the previous poster, "Fair enough.".
Was just puzzled why you would care so much that you bothered posting, since you don't use/own Sony products any more, ergo it doesn't in anyway effect you.
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Perhaps you should make a stand by buying a 360 or Wii instead, where they welcome pirates with open arms. Or not.
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Making those sorts of blatant false dichotomies isn't really helping your case. Some of us genuinely want to be able to do whatever we like with our PS3s, and I don't think that other people pirating material makes it any less reasonable to expect to exercise some control over our own property.
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It's hard for me. the ONLY pro video editing app out there that is worth a damn for the pc platform is Sony Vegas. The adobe garbage is a great toy for amateurs, but when you shoot with pro AVCHD cameras sony vegas is the only choice on the PC. I would love to go bac kto mac and Final Cut, but I cant justify $5800.00 for the computer alone. I can buy a super high end Generic PC from dell + sony Vegas pro + another pro AVCHD camera for the price of JUST the Apple tower.
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Someone did not take his lithium this morning...
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If you boycott something properly you have to talk about it 8 million times. It's no good boycotting quietly.
So... (Score:5, Interesting)
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No. It means that somebody who works at Sony published the key and will likely be fired for misuses of company resources.
In the context of trade secrets and the law ... (Score:5, Interesting)
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Now, if something like this can be subject to copyright (which, I wouldn't think it would be able to, but I can't say for sure--IANAL), there may still be action there to be had.
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Actually, it probably means that his Twitter account was hacked, and the key posted. In another article Sony indicated that they would be going after every web site hosting the key to remove it from the internet. Now that key is posted on Slashdot.
Re:So... (Score:4, Insightful)
Doubtful. Not many people could tell what a private key is when looking at it, especially not a marketing type who doesn't deal with that shit. I'm betting it was just an ignorance mistake on the part of whoever was manning the Kevin Jack twitter account at that time. Just because you see an encryption key doesn't mean 99% of the rest of the world will know what it is.
Never attribute to malice that which can be explained by stupidity.
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Re:So... (Score:5, Interesting)
I think the guy behind TheKevinButler twitter account thought the twittered PS3 master key was some kind of coordinates, that's why he replied "you sank my Battleship?". After someone from Sony realized it was in fact the master key, the marketing team must have removed the related post. Makes sense.. no?
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Actually.... it looks like he didn't know what it was at all, I am pretty sure that the battleship quote was just a snarky comment.
Though this reminds me of implementing a notification system. It was a web page that allowed notices to be posted, and also to have them be pushed out onto email and usenet (yah, it was a while ago). Lets never mind that my boss had me write the thing before he sent me (alone) to the design comittee with instructions "don't let them know its written already, try to resist any fu
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How about (Score:2)
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Actually the guy is not even real. :P
Re:How about (Score:5, Informative)
(It is however the "real" Kevin Butler's [wikipedia.org] "real" twitter account.)
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The master key is hard burnt in to ROM inside PS3's. There is no way firmware can change this key.
Or... (Score:2, Insightful)
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I never understood this "account hacked" thing. You mean that twitter service has a security vulnerability and someone was able to tweet with his account without the right credentials, OR someone used his account logging in with his weak password?, because that's not hacking on my book.
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Confused... (Score:2)
Has anyone actually verified that this is indeed the key?
Sony really wanted to leak it - why else would a marketing guy even have the key?
He doesn't actually work for Sony. I have some posts that say he is not. (a-la Colbert)
Can anyone clarify any of these thoughts?
Re:Confused... (Score:5, Informative)
My (perhaps incorrect) understanding is that exiva tweeted the key to Kevin Butler (the marketing guy) followed by the words "Come at me." Kevin Butler then retweeted it with "Lemme guess... you sank my Battleship?" because he didn't know what it was. So, Sony didn't give the key to a marketing guy, someone outside of Sony (exiva) did.
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I think the simplest explanation is that the marking person behind that twitter account has no idea what a root key looks like, so he retweeted it without knowing what it was. That's why he thought it was Battleship moves.
What's next.. (Score:3)
this story is stupid and "Kevin Buttler" is stupid (Score:3)
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These coordinates are for the extended Battleship(tm) game. Battleship(tm) with Nukes(tm) from Orbit(tm)
A clever dupe! (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:A clever dupe! (Score:5, Insightful)
The irony of the situation is how appropriate that response is, even in the new context.
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The problem is we have now "wasted" this meme such that "any information coming from an inbound message in social media that gets repeated is either not intentionally repeated as an authorized communication", or else all info from an inbound message must be vetted by legal before being included in a reply.
He didn't know what it was (Score:2)
Read the tweet, he though it was a set of Battleship coordinates. I bet it actually was that guy (or whoever tweets for him) that posted it.
Snake eats tail (Score:2)
136,000! (Score:2)
This really is the Streisand Effect ++ At what point will Sony give up? Surely the resources involved in chasing down every site will eventually cost more than the projected income from keeping this key private. Not that it is private anymore. A quick Google finds 136,000 entries for the key!
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They won't give up. They have deeper pockets than the hackers and can keep them tied up in the courts for as long as they like.
All part of their new marketing plan (Score:2)
Looks like Sony's new "Hack the Box!" marketing plan got leaked a little early.
oh for F...'s sake... (Score:2)
This marketing idiot retweeted something someone sent him and had no idea what he was doing...
Read the tweet...
He should be fired. He's an idiot.
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So (Score:2)
Kevin Butler (Score:4, Informative)
Yuo sunk mah battleship (Score:5, Funny)
http://www.unixslave.com/ysmb.png [unixslave.com]
twitter schmitter (Score:2)
A truly amusing hack, and one worthy of being called a hack in the first place, would be to get Sony's DNS servers to return the assorted keys. Twitter foolery is just that.
This just in (Score:2)
Sony is demanding Twitter turn over all of the IP addresses of everyone who follows Kevin Butler. For good measure, they also want the IP addresses of all of *those* followers followers and the followers of the second batch as well.
Sony is also preparing a lawsuit against Google for making the RTs available to the world on Google RealTime: http://www.google.com/search?tbs=mbl%3A1&hl=en&source=hp&biw=1408&bih=851&q=%40TheKevinButler+Lemme+Guess&btnG=Search
Finally, Sony is also suing
you sank my Battleship? (Score:2)
"'@TheKevinButler Lemme guess... you sank my Battleship?"
Yes, yes he did.
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"Nah, I just rearranged the controls on the helm, you just sunk your battleship"
I don't understand. why did this happen? (Score:5, Interesting)
Why did this happen? A few theories:
1) an unintentional auto-complete disaster ....???
2) disgruntled employee
3) Hacked twitter account used to launder code in to public domain
4) A diversion: A secondary easily revoked key, not the master, being used to take the piss out of efforts to to find the real master
what is your guess?
Re:I don't understand. why did this happen? (Score:5, Funny)
1) an unintentional auto-complete disaster
Yeah, don't you just hate it when you type 46 and 46 DC EA D3 17 FE 45 D8 09 23 EB 97 E4 95 64 10 D4 CD B2 C2 get suggested.
Re:I don't understand. why did this happen? (Score:5, Funny)
Or when you want to write 46 DC EA D3 17 FE 45 D8 09 23 EB 97 E4 95 64 10 D4 CD B2 C2 and 46 DC EA D3 17 FE 45 D8 09 23 EB 97 E4 95 64 10 D4 CD B2 C2 don't get suggested until you typed 46 DC EA D3 17 FE 45 D8 09 23 EB 97 E4 95 64 10 D4 CD B2 C.
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This is the real key. It's been known for a few weeks now. Sony has been trying to suppress anyone who reposts the key. Obviously a futile effort.
The marketing guy was tricked into tweeting the key as he responded to another tweet.
Re:I don't understand. why did this happen? (Score:5, Insightful)
I think you missed a major possibility:
5) As a marketing guy, he has no clue what he was looking at.
Look at his reply: "Lemme guess... you sank my Battleship?" He's guessing, he doesn't know what the string of characters is. He's in marketing, not engineering. That's why the message got removed, because someone who did know what they're seeing contacted him about it (and he's now probably hoping that he doesn't get fired for it).
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Sure it has. There was the app that killed "Other OS", and the app that killed the ability to run games completely offline...
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There's no need to speculate, you can just look at the image to know.
Somebody posted the key and referenced his account. He replied, repeating the key, beacuse he didn't know what it was.
Re:Well, this just goes to show ... (Score:4, Insightful)
69000 new IPs to subpoena?
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I'm not sure Kevin Butler actually understood what he was doing. He's a marketer, he probably wouldn't recognize an encryption key when he sees one.
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Sony has been suing every one who puts the key on the internet. They key is the master key to the PS3 that has resulted in completely making its DRM system uselss.
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The posting of the key on twitter?
Nothing.
The key could be easily gotten off the internet by anyone who has the expertise to use it.
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Slashdotters don't have lives, friends, girlfriends, or this 'outside' you speak of. You must be new here.
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Sorry, you've had your time old man. Report to your nearest Sleepshop immediately.
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Yes, for the same reason that everything ever printed anywhere for all time is now legally public domain.
That word does not mean what you think it means.
You're not kidding... (Score:3)
No kidding. They even plan to subpoena Slashdot [groklaw.net] (not to mention Twitter). I don't know what they'll get out of that except for a lot of "in soviet Russia" jokes, but I guess their lawyers like wasting their client's billable hours on fishing expeditions?
I suggest they try Googling that key. I don't know how many results they'll find, but I'm guessing there will be thousands, if not more. It's kind of futile to tell the judge that you need expedited discovery and such when the cat is not merely out of th