Hacking the PSP Mentioned in Business Week: "Attack of the Playstation Hackers"
My new book, Hacking the PSP, was mentioned in BusinessWeek... take a gander!
http://www.businessweek.com/technology/content/dec2005/tc20051230_356459.htm?campaign_id=search
Attack of the PlayStation Hackers
Sony's
portable game consoles are being dismembered and reprogrammed -- a
movement that jeopardizes the profit potential of authorized software
The moment Sony's (SNE)
handheld game console, PlayStation Portable, went on sale in the U.S.
on March 24, Auri Rahimzadeh got one. For months, he'd heard all about
the latest gizmo from the Japanese electronics giant. Slightly bulkier
than a checkbook and costing around $200, the PSP was the ultimate in
mobile entertainment -- a video-game, movie and music player, and
Internet portal all wrapped into one easy-to-carry package.
');
}
//-->
var gnEbMinZIndex = 10000;
var gfEbInIframe = false;
var gEbBAd = new Object();
gEbBAd.nFlightID = 100651;
gEbBAd.nWidth = 300;
gEbBAd.nHeight = 250;
var gstrEbRandnum = new String(Math.random());
gstrEbRandnum = gstrEbRandnum.substring(gstrEbRandnum.indexOf(".")+1 , gstrEbRandnum.length);
gEbBAd.strNonSupported = "http://bs.serving-sys.com/BurstingPipe/NonSupportedBanner.asp?FlightID=100651&Page=&PluID=0&Width=300&Height=250&Pos=" + gstrEbRandnum;
While Rahimzadeh had been waiting for his preordered
console, he had read rave reviews by technophiles who had scored a PSP
in Japan months earlier. He knew this was no ordinary gaming gizmo.
MOVIE BUFF.
But Rahimzadeh had a hunch that the PSP could do far more. And from the
instant he tore through the packaging, the 30-year-old software
designer from Indianapolis knew exactly how to unlock all that untapped
potential: hacking.
"I always try getting more out of a device,
if it appears it can do it and I can enjoy the device more," says
Rahimzadeh, whose book, Hacking the PSP, is due out in December.
So
far, Rahimzadeh has written software for his own PSP and downloaded, or
"homebrew," games written by other techies. He's even found a way to
watch the hundreds of movies and TV shows he has on DVD by ripping them
onto the PSP's tiny, removable 1-gigabyte memory cards.
SECRETS BARED.
Rahimzadeh wasn't alone. On Web bulletin boards, the word was out.
Hackers were discovering that it didn't take much to modify -- "mod" in
hacker parlance -- the PSP's Firmware version 1.5 software. Web sites
were soon offering tips on how to write new programs in languages such
as C++ or Lua and run them on memory sticks.
They would tell you
which adapters could link a PSP to an iPod. Hardware experts gave
detailed instructions on where to solder the PSP's circuit board. And
anonymous contributors sent in discoveries, such as using a PSP to
remote control a Sony Aibo robot dog.
By June 15, the PSP was
fully unmasked when a team of hackers cracked the code and published
the results online, according to Greg MacKenzie, who runs the site
psp-hacks.com with Paul Shales in Toronto, Canada.
SEE YOU IN COURT?
But Sony was hardly sitting still, since hackers who buy the machine
but shun the content pose a direct threat to the company's business
model. Like other game-machine makers, Sony doesn't make money on the
consoles -- it profits on the royalties from licensed games and movies
(see BW Online, 11/22/05 "Microsoft's Red-Ink Game").
As
early as May, the company's video-game unit, Sony Computer
Entertainment (SCEI), had software updates that plugged the PSP's
vulnerabilities. In late July, it began a carrot-and-stick approach,
warning would-be hackers and enticing them to try out the new upgrades,
which added a Web browser and new music-player and photo-viewer.
A
month later, it followed with similar upgrades for U.S. users. Sony
officials won't say whether they are considering suing hackers. "We
cannot guarantee PSP hardware that has been modified," says SCEI
spokeswoman Nanako Kato.
MICROSOFT, TOO.
PSP sales surpassed 10 million in late October but Sony doesn't
disclose financial data on the franchise. "It's a well-known fact in
the video-game industry that the bulk of revenues derive from the games
software rather than the hardware, which is often sold at a loss or
break even," says Schelley Olhava, an analyst with market-research firm
IDC. "Sony's PSP business is heavily reliant on selling content."
Is
this attack specific to Sony, the world's dominant game-console maker?
Hardly. Hackers have picked apart other makers' video-game consoles
with just as much glee. Microsoft's (MSFT)
Xbox360, which was launched on Nov. 22, was barely on the shelf before
hackers were weighing in on a handful of Web sites with advice about
linking the Xbox to a PSP or running programs based on the Linux
operating system.
In April, Nintendo's handheld DS and Sony's
PlayStation consoles were the subject of contests for hackers on a site
called engadget.com.
CIRCUIT SURGERY.
Hackers say they only created the online open-source system to remedy
the PSP's shortcomings. Many initially complained about the device's
limited compatibility with video and audio formats. Songs stored in an
iTunes (AAPL) browser
wouldn't play, and neither would MP4 videos. Converting videos to the
memory sticks was a headache, and wirelessly shuttling data from the
PSP to another device took a lot of creativity. Forget about hooking a
PSP to a TV and playing movies, or running the library of Sony games
made for the living-room consoles.
David Prochnow, a technology
writer, says the PSP had all the potential of a powerful multimedia
device but was "crippled" by its software. Using a soldering iron and a
screwdriver, he tore open his PSP -- and now it prints photographs,
shares music with other portable players, and runs all types of
converted video files. "Any, and every, PSP owner can become a hacker,"
says Prochnow, whose book, PSP Hacks, Mods and Expansions, goes on sale in December.
Sony
says it can stay ahead of the hackers. With recent updates, the PSP can
now play a variety of music formats and podcasts, as well as digital
video clips downloaded form the Net. In October, Sony added its newest
option -- a LocationFree program that lets users stream videos to the
PSP by tapping into a PC or DVD player at home over Wi-Fi or broadband
connections.
SLICK STUFF. For every
new Firmware update, hackers have advised doing just the opposite --
downgrading to older, low-security software they posted on the Net.
There were plenty heeding the advice. Traffic on the psp-hacks.com site
averages 12 million hits a month, according to Mackenzie, who started
the site as a blog for friends.
"I've seen some amazing products
from independent developers," says Rahimzadeh, the software developer
and author. "Much of this homebrew software has the finesse of the huge
game-development houses such as Electronics Arts (ERTS) and even Sony." From the look of it, this battle is only just beginning.