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Author Topic: New PS3 Firmware contains Sony Backdoor (Rootkit), allegedly  (Read 2890 times)

Josh

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New PS3 Firmware contains Sony Backdoor (Rootkit), allegedly
« on: February 01, 2011, 01:50 PM »
According to developer Mathieulh, the official PS3 firmware v3.56 is said to contain a rootkit which allow Sony to perform remote code execution upon connection to the PlayStation network. What this means is that Sony can scan for specific files on your PS3 console—such as custom firmwares and hombrew applications—and send a report back to the company. Whether this is legal or not is yet to be determined but be careful what you put on your PS3.

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Renegade

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Re: New PS3 Firmware contains Sony Backdoor (Rootkit), allegedly
« Reply #1 on: February 01, 2011, 06:18 PM »
Sigh... But no surprise. Sony like their rootkits.
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Deozaan

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Re: New PS3 Firmware contains Sony Backdoor (Rootkit), allegedly
« Reply #2 on: February 02, 2011, 01:49 PM »
Apparently it also had a major bug that made some PS3s say the hard drives were corrupted:

Sony has secretly released a new version of the 3.56 firmware, version 2, which fixes a major bug in the previous release. The bug, which is now fixed, involved user upgraded hard drives showing up as corrupted. Sony silently pushed out the new 3.56 PUP, attempting to cover up the fact that they dropped the ball on the original 3.56 release. It appears to be a common trend with Sony, that quality assurance goes out the window, anytime a new firmware update is urgently pushed out for release by them.