top | item 41493547

(no title)

aatharuv | 1 year ago

This reminds me of when Sony disabled their officially supported OtherOS support (used to install Linux and other os's dual boot) with an update. Of course without the update, no access to the Sony Store, games that require the latest Sony PS3 stopped working, etc...

discuss

order

Matheus28|1 year ago

They got sued in a class action lawsuit for that, which got dragged out for ~7 years: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/OtherOS

And in the end users who had used that feature and lost it got... $10.07

brookst|1 year ago

Class actions are more about penalizing the company than making customers whole. I’m pretty sure the legal and settlement costs were enough to make Sony create processes to avoid that happening again.

tiltowait|1 year ago

You also needed onerous levels of proof to get that whopper of a payout. IIRC you needed a photo of you using it or to submit a dump of your MBR showing the OtherOS partition.

I did not get my $10.07.

roastedpeacock|1 year ago

Sony omitted OtherOS support with the PS3 Slim hardware revision with seemingly no technical justification and later removed it from existing consoles.

Afterwards several researchers investigated how to execute third-party code on the device and succeeded. [1] In response Sony did attempt to prosecute several people under DMCA and similar claims [2] and were more successful with certain defendants in some countries versus others.

[1] https://media.ccc.de/v/27c3-4087-en-console_hacking_2010 [2] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sony_Computer_Entertainment_Am...

rgovostes|1 year ago

Exactly what I thought of, too. Was the PS3 the first forced-downgrade?

0xcde4c3db|1 year ago

Nowhere near the same level of "forced", but the earliest similar situation I know of was Microsoft issuing an update to MS-DOS that removed the "DoubleSpace" filesystem compression feature due to losing a patent lawsuit [1]. They later introduced another update with a replacement, "DriveSpace", that did roughly the same thing but with an incompatible on-disk format and a modest performance hit.

[1] https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1994-02-24-fi-26671-...

Zuiii|1 year ago

And I haven't bought anything from them since. May that company go bankrupt.