[QUOTE="theuncharted34"]Rofl'd. Hope sony finds (them) and sue them for life. Seeing that Sony can't stop them, that's unlike;y....sony doing that would be as likely a chicken walking into kfc.
ZippySlappy
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[QUOTE="theuncharted34"]Rofl'd. Hope sony finds (them) and sue them for life. Seeing that Sony can't stop them, that's unlike;y....sony doing that would be as likely a chicken walking into kfc.
ZippySlappy
Man, this kids are getting really annoying, who the hell are they to demand those things, i hope they get to work one day in the country, that would be a good punishment.
List of demands? Doesn't that sound reminiscent of, oh I don't know, someone in a stand off with cops, holding a bank full of hostages? TheMoreYouOwnYeah, and the hostages are the very people that Anon claims to be trying to defend, the consumers.
Seems to me that they are just paranoid beacause they think their IPs on on Sony's list for viewing geo's "how to hack your ps3" videos. Also, seems to me that the people saying their demands, especially that number 3, are paranoid for the same reason. It's ok guys, Sony isn't going to sue you because your IP address was implicated. They also aren't going to sue you for modding your PS3's hardware or software. Hack your ps3 to your hearts content. Run linux on it (although nobody really does) do whatever you want. But don't expect to take a modified ps3 or a ps3 running unofficial firmware or software onto the PSN. That's all Sony is saying. And if you find THAT unreasonable, but find cyberterrorism and blackmail reasonable, which ultimately hurts nobody but the legitimate PS3 consumers, all in the name of "defending consumers from greedy corporations," then its probably just because you do or want to engage in hacking/cheating/pirating yourself.
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