Regarding this whole situation, I think that in some areas it's really ridiculous how Sony is raising all of this commotion, especially how Sony was going as far as subpoenaing people involved with this hack and all the nonsense with Youtube. Plus with all of this rumored talk about with Sony data mining with what peripherals are connected to the PS3, what TV the PS3 it's connected to, and more. If all of this is true, it's quite scary thought!
We all know how fast the Wii got hacked, and while Nintendo tried to thwart it with numerous firmware updates they didn't go out like a raving lunatic like Sony has with all the lawsuits and media attention.I don't mind at all when a company tries to protect their business with ways to prevent piracy, and of course a company will do it for the best interest and this is obviously done by firmware updates since it's the most convient but irritating for us since we have to update in order to access online features for consoles. It shocked me that only Sony was the only company to use a firmware update to actually disable a feature on the "fat" PS3, and how recently in order to simply connect to PSN, I had to agree to an errata of the end user agreement for PSN which informs users that Sony can collect data from you.
While I agree with the motto of, "you paid for the device, do whatever you want with it"; it won't be the case anymore considering how crazy the EULA is for consoles if you actually bother reading it (which no one does!), and also because of how consoles and portables are becoming much more network centric each device is becoming in each generation.
If Sony, Microsoft, or Nintendo don't like what you're doing on your console, they can zap that piece of homebrew software or any other unauthorized software that they don't like as they please.
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