As the initial hysteria (mostly justified) surrounding the
Sony PSN breach subsides, more measured estimates of the damage are appearing, but more serious questions are becoming relevant. It's still too early to be sure what the extent of the damage is, but the early and sensational estimates (propagated before Sony announced relevant numbers) seem to be giving way to a more complex, nuanced look at the damage. A few people have claimed suspicious activity on their accounts so far, but there doesn't seem to be any systematic fraud going on - on the other hand, it isn't easy to immediately leverage 10-15 million credit cards. Sony
announced that it will be reestablishing access to "some" PSN and Qriocity services this week, with a focus on access to account details, online play, and access to purchased media. Other services should be online within a month. As far as restitution, Sony is offering a month of Playstation Plus and Qriocity Unlimited for free, plus a free PSN download, currently unspecified. That would likely be enough to compound for an ordinary extended outage, but this was more than a glitch. Sony will likely get rougher handling from an investigation of their security practices than from frustrated customers.
Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/McnN3NMFa4U/
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