To all the Playstation warriors out there:
SONY has shut down a second online video-game unit amid an expanding investigation of a computer hack that may have compromised the personal information of as many as 77 million users, the latest black eye for the Japanese technology giant. Sony Online Entertainment, a San Diego-based subsidiary that makes multiplayer role-playing games, said it temporarily shut down services yesterday amid concerns a hacker may have breached its security.
Two weeks ago, the company shut down its PlayStation Network, which lets gamers play against each other online, after it discovered a hacker had stolen names, birth dates and possibly credit-card numbers from the network.
Sony said the shutdown of Sony Online Entertainment, which hosts the popular EverQuest role-playing game, was prompted by an expansion of the initial investigation, not a separate attack.
"We temporarily took down SOE's services as part of our continued investigation into the external intrusion that occurred in April," said Michele Sturdivant, a Sony Online Entertainment spokeswoman. "This is not a second attack."
The Australian.
SONY has shut down a second online video-game unit amid an expanding investigation of a computer hack that may have compromised the personal information of as many as 77 million users, the latest black eye for the Japanese technology giant. Sony Online Entertainment, a San Diego-based subsidiary that makes multiplayer role-playing games, said it temporarily shut down services yesterday amid concerns a hacker may have breached its security.
Two weeks ago, the company shut down its PlayStation Network, which lets gamers play against each other online, after it discovered a hacker had stolen names, birth dates and possibly credit-card numbers from the network.
Sony said the shutdown of Sony Online Entertainment, which hosts the popular EverQuest role-playing game, was prompted by an expansion of the initial investigation, not a separate attack.
"We temporarily took down SOE's services as part of our continued investigation into the external intrusion that occurred in April," said Michele Sturdivant, a Sony Online Entertainment spokeswoman. "This is not a second attack."
The Australian.
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