Welcome to PS3Hax, your official PS3 hacks, PS3 Homebrew, and PS3 Downloads scene. Check back daily to keep up with the latest PS3 Hacks and drop by our forums for more PS3 Hacks discussions.
  • Posted by GregoryRasputin , on 22/05/2010 , @ 07:05

     

    As we all know, with homebrew, comes Piracy, it is an inevitable unavoidable fact, when a console is circumvented in order to play hombrew, like the PSP was, someone creates an ISO Loader, thus we have the influx of the downloading of Pirated games, which have been previously uploaded to torrent or similar sites.

    So recently in an interview with Gamasutra, Sony’s Senior Vice President of Publisher Relations for North America, Rob Dyer, spoke about new methods Sony would be helping game dev’s impliment into games, that would mean it would be impossible for the games to be pirated for at least 60 days.

    A quote from Gamasutra.

    Dyer freely admits that piracy has had a profound impact on the system: “That’s been the biggest problem, no question about it. It’s become a very difficult proposition to be profitable, given the piracy right now.”

    However, he promises that Sony has developed technology which will “slow down the piracy in the first 30 to 60 days… There’s some code that you can embed that we’ve been helping developers implement in order to get people at least to see a 60-day shelf life before it gets hacked and it shows up on BitTorrent.”

    Source: Sony’s Dyer: The PSP Has Problems, We’re Fixing Them

  • Posted by Pirate , on 25/01/2010 , @ 04:01

     

    Here is an interview GeoHot apparently has apparently done with BBC relating to the most recent news of the PS3 hack quoted below:

    A US hacker who gained notoriety for unlocking Apple’s iPhone as a teenager has told BBC News that he has now hacked Sony’s PlayStation 3 (PS3).

    George Hotz said the hack, which could allow people to run pirated games or homemade software, took him five weeks.

    He said he was still refining the technique but intended to post full details online soon.

    The PS3 is the only games console that has not been hacked, despite being on the market for three years.

    “It’s supposed to be unhackable – but nothing is unhackable,” Mr Hotz told BBC News.

    “I can now do whatever I want with the system. It’s like I’ve got an awesome new power – I’m just not sure how to wield it.”

    Sony said it was “investigating the report” and would “clarify the situation” when it had more information.

    ‘Open curiosity’

    Mr Hotz said that he had begun the hack last summer when he had spent three weeks analysing the hardware.

    After a long break, he spent a further two weeks cracking the console, which he described as a “very secure system”.

    He said that he was not yet ready to reveal the full details of the hack but said that it was “5% hardware and 95% software”.

    “You can use hardware to inject an insecurity and then you can build on that,” he said.

    He admitted that he had not managed to hack the whole system, including the protected memory, but had worked out ways to trick the console into doing what he wanted.

    Mr Hotz said that he was continuing to work on the hack and, once finished, would publish details online in a similar way to his previous iPhone exploits.

    In particular, he said, he would publish details of the console’s “root key”, a master code that once known would make it easier for others to decipher and hack other security features on the console.

    He said his motivation was “curiosity” and “opening up the platform”.

    “To tell you the truth, I’ve never really played a PS3,” he said. “I have one game, but I’ve never really played it.”

    Opening the system could allow people to install other operating systems on their console and play homemade games, he said.

    In addition, he said, the hack would allow people to play older PS2 games on their consoles.

    Recent versions of the PS3 do not have the ability to play PS2 games after Sony controversially removed a piece of hardware.

    He admitted that it could also allow people to run pirated games.

    “I’m not going to personally have anything to do with that,” he told BBC News.

    Gaming firms do not take the issue of game piracy and console modification lightly. Recently, Microsoft disconnected thousands of gamers from its online gaming service Xbox Live for modifying their consoles to play pirated games.

    Mr Hotz said that the nature of his PS3 hack means that Sony may have difficulty patching the exploit.

    “We are investigating the report and will clarify the situation once we have more information,” said a Sony spokesman.

    Mr Hotz rose to fame in 2007 at the age of 17 when he unlocked the iPhone, which could only be used on the AT&T network in the US at launch.

    The hack allowed the popular handset to be used on any network.

    He has since released various other hacks, allowing people to unlock later versions of the popular handset.

    [VIA]

  • Posted by Pirate , on 17/10/2009 , @ 01:10

     

    Microsoft have introduced a new disc security to stop piracy on the 360 (Wave 4 protection). The game “Car-o-Rama” is known to have this new security on it, but a 3mb patch quickly strips the new security.

    Last Friday Disney Pixar released a new game, Car O Rama, which boasted a new Wave 4 protection. Microsoft’s earlier attempts at protecting the Xbox 360 against piracy have all failed miserably, and it seems this one is no exception. Pirates have already created a temporary fix for the iXtreme 1.6 hack firmware, which involves you downloading a 3MB “activate.iso” file and burning it to a DVD9 disc.

    This disc can then be used to load games with Wave 4 protection, which currently only include Car O Rama, but will most likely include otehr games in the future. The official NFO file for the loader states

    [VIA]