Sony Sues Hackers Over PS3 Root Key Publication, Custom Firmware

Sony has gone ahead and sued the people responsible for the PS3 master key and the custom firmware.

According to documents, SCEA has filed a complaint with the Northern Californian District Court against George Hots (GeoHot), Hector Martin Cantero & Sven Peter (fail0verflow), and 100 “does”, or unnamed defendants.

Sony alleges the defendants have “circumvented effective technological protection measures … employed by SCEA to protect against unauthorized access to and/or copying of … PlayStation 3 computer entertainment systems … and other copyrighted works”.

Moreover it accuses the lot of them of having “trafficked in circumvention technology, products, services, methods, codes, software tools, devices, component or part thereof, including but not limited to the Elliptic Curve Digital Signature Algorithm Keys, encryption and/or decryption keys, dePKG firmware decrypter program, Signing Tools, 3.55 Firmware Jailbreak, and/or any other technologies that enable unauthorized access to and/or copying of PS3 Systems and other copyrighted works.”

Apparently, this violates the Digital Millennium Copyright Act; the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act; the Copyright Act; California Comprehensive Computer Data Access and Fraud Act; and also squeezes in breach of contract, tortious interference with contractual relations, trespass and common law misappropriation.

via VG247

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Written By on January 12th, 2011 Categories: News, PS3 Tags:

2 Responses to “Sony Sues Hackers Over PS3 Root Key Publication, Custom Firmware”

  1. Ahh….this was inevitable 🙄

  2. Sony FTW! :mrgreen:

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