Showing posts with label Playstation. Show all posts

Monday, 29 December 2014

PlayStation Network back online, while Lizard hacker group basks in limelight.

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11:41

After days of disruption Sony’s PlayStation Network is functioning again – but hackers’ appetite for fame may prove their undoing.

The PlayStation Network is back online ... for now. 

The global gaming service used by 110m people was brought down on Christmas Eve, seemingly by a hacking group calling itself Lizard Squad. On Sunday however, Sony assured customers via its PlayStation blog that the system was now functioning. 

The company also admitted for the first time that the disruption was caused by hackers who used a distributed denial of service (DDoS) attack to flood the PlayStation servers with traffic, bringing access to a halt.

A View of Chat with Lizard Squad.
“As you probably know, PlayStation Network and some other gaming services were attacked over the holidays with artificially high levels of traffic designed to disrupt connectivity and online gameplay,” read the post. “This may have prevented your access to the network and its services over the last few days.”

Microsoft’s Xbox Live infrastructure was also attacked, reportedly by the same group, which revelled in its achievement via a series of tweets throughout Christmas day. However, the Xbox online infrastructure was functioning again by Boxing Day.

Formed in mid-2013, Lizard Squad has been stepping up its media profile in the wake of the Christmas attacks. In a series of interviews, two self-declared founding members have claimed that their motivations are amusement, and to highlight the security weaknesses of the systems.

“If I was working [at Microsoft or Sony] and had a big enough budget, I could totally stop these attacks,” “Ryan Cleary” (a pseudonym borrowed from an infamous LulzSec hacker) claimed to tech news site Daily Dot. “I’d buy more bandwidth, some specific equipment, and configure it correctly. It’s just about programming skill. With an attack of this scale, it could go up to the millions. But that’s really no problem for Sony and Microsoft.”

Speaking to Sky News, “Cleary” added, “These companies make tens of millions every month from subscriber fees and that doesn’t even include purchases made by their customers.

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“They should have more than enough funding to be able to protect against these attacks.”

Lizard Squad has claimed that its actions against Sony and Microsoft were more sophisticated than standard DDoS attacks, which don’t usually require hackers to gain access to the target’s online infrastructure.

“There’s plenty of people saying we’re not hackers and DDoS isn’t hacking. For attacks of this scale, you can’t really do them without either having access to insane amounts of funding or being able to gain access to the computers via hacking,” “Cleary” said to Daily Dot. “You can’t just do DDoS attacks from your home computer. It doesn’t work.”

The group has even suggested that it has access to undersea cables that facilitate internet connections between the US and Europe.

But its appetite for fame may prove to be Lizard Squad’s undoing, after security journalist Brian Krebs claims to have uncovered the possible true identities of at least two members, both of whom have conducted TV interviews in the wake of the attacks.

“Ryan Cleary”, Krebs claims, is in fact a Finnish teenager. Krebs claims the other founding member is a 22-year-old Briton. Krebs says that he has found one of these men enquiring on the site Hackforums about how to dispose of Mega vouchers; Krebs claims this was a reference to the $300,000 bribe in vouchers the group allegedly received from Kim Dotcom for stopping the attacks. 

“Both of these individuals may in fact be guilty of nothing more than taking credit for other peoples’ crimes,” Krebs writes. “But I hope it’s clear to the media that the Lizard Squad is not some sophisticated hacker group. The Lizard Squad’s monocle-wearing mascot shows them to be little more than a group of fame-seeking kids who desperately aspire to be like LulzSec, a similarly minded gang whose core members are all now in jail. With any luck, these kids will get their wish soon enough.”

Lizard Squad first came to public attention in August, when it claimed responsibility for a previous DDoS attack on the PlayStation Network. It was even implicated in a hoax bomb warning, delivered to an American Airlines flight which had a senior Sony executive onboard. The size and location of the group is unknown, although it claims to be just a handful of programmers. In an interview with YouTube news channel Drama Alert, representatives of the group claimed to be coordinating their attacks via a data centre in Moldova.

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Xbox Live And PSN Are Still Messed Up After Attack By Hackers.

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00:58

PlayStation Network and Xbox Live are still repeatedly going offline and experiencing problems, so if you're itching to try out a new Christmas gift game, you may have to wait.

Some Xbox One users may currently be experiencing issues signing into Xbox Live. Please see http://t.co/99xfLNN0o8 for more info. AD

- Xbox Support (1-5) (@XboxSupport) December 26, 2014
Our engineers are continuing to work hard to resolve the network issues users have experienced today. Thanks for your continued patience!

- Ask PlayStation (@AskPlayStation) December 26, 2014
An inane hacking group called "Lizard Squad" is taking responsibility for the service problems and insisting that people RT their tweets before they'll fix them. There's no confirmation that this group is definitely responsible, but they've been teasing plans to screw up these networks for weeks. Lizard Squad is already infamous in the gaming world for its history of random attacks. This past August, it gained notoriety attacking Runescape and League of Legends, so this latest attack would be a continuation of its dipshit activities.

There are a number of different Twitter accounts claiming to be this hacker group, and it looks like at least one of them made a deal with Kim DotCom to end the hack, as Mashable pointed out:

Thanks @LizardMafia for stopping attack on XBOX Live & PSN. Let everyone play with their Xmas gifts. Your Mega vouchers have been approved!

- Kim Dotcom (@KimDotcom) December 26, 2014
Yet the 3000 MegaPrivacy vouchers Kim Dotcom tried to use as an olive branch, people are still having a hard time using Xbox Live and PSN, so perhaps the hackers were not satisfied with their bounty. It's whatever the opposite of a Christmas miracle is.

But As of Latest Update Xbox And PS Network Engineers Working very hard to resolve the situation Before New Year...

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Sunday, 28 December 2014

Samsung TVs will play PlayStation games without a PlayStation in 2015.

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13:14

Samsung smart TVs will have access to the PlayStation Now game streaming service in the first half of next year.


Sony and Samsung are teaming up to offer gamers a festive treat: PlayStation games without a PlayStation on Samsung smart TVs.

Samsung's Internet-connected TVs in the US and Canada will be able to access the PlayStation Now service in the first half of next year.

PlayStation Now enables you to stream games from the Web straight to the TV without needing a PlayStation console. You do need a Sony Dualshock controller, but once that's plugged in all you have to do is fire up an app on the TV and you can choose from over 200 PS3 games to start playing immediately.

Games are streamed from the cloud so there's no need for downloads. You can play games online against friends, and save your progress in the cloud ready to pick up next time where you left off. Streaming does mean lag could be an issue, however, so you'll have to make sure your Internet connection is fast enough to do the game justice.

No exact date has yet been offered for the new service. And neither company has responded yet to a request for more information on whether the service will be available outside of the US and Canada.

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