- 9,554
- Vermont
- catamount39
When will the pain stop? Seriously... 
The main reason why I don't like online always games: Servers down=drink coaster.Too bad I have "The Crew" for PS4...can't get past the initial start screen.![]()
Hey how'd you know I was using it for that?The main reason why I don't like online always games: Servers down=drink coaster.
Well, rather annoyingly, the PS4 is the only console I actually have lolWell its something to be happy about finally. Now...the PS4. -_-
Hopefully they can fix it by tonight...*crosses fingers and begins praying*Well, rather annoyingly, the PS4 is the only console I actually have lol
My only options are toHopefully they can fix it by tonight...*crosses fingers and begins praying*
I really want to START playing The Crew...all I got is Watch Dogs and The Last if Us: RM for offline on PS4. Well back to watching Amazon rentals on this Kindle. :/My only options are to
A: Watch DVD
B: Play GTAV solo
This better be fixed by tomorrow. I really want to get back on The Crew
So you haven't started it yet? If you want to be in my crew just add me on PSN when it's back up. Its the same as my GTP name.I really want to START playing The Crew...all I got is Watch Dogs and The Last if Us: RM for offline on PS4. Well back to watching Amazon rentals on this Kindle. :/
Holy mother of Stig...IT'S ALIVE?!View attachment 280883 I was able to login on my PS4 after about 4 attempts, everything is a little slow, but at least it is working, I am in Kentucky by the way. My PS3 has worked most of the time except this morning.
According to a friend of mine that uses Netflix, He said his Netflix works when he can't sign in to the playstation network on his ps3. I just checked and I can sign in (PS3) and I see about 7 other friends in various regions of UK, Canada, and U.S. and I'm in west U.S. A friend of mine nearby said he cannot get on with his ps4 yet though.Well, my sister is using Netflix on the PS3 right now, so it's pretty safe to say that PSN is working for the PS3
Something even better from that link:A little bit of information regarding freebies guys.
Link.
http://www.brashgames.co.uk/2014/12/26/sony-to-offer-free-games-and-services-for-psn-outage/
You would have guessed with all the millions they are making they would be protected against such things
Money buys everything doesn't it? So maybe they can invest a couple of millions in preventing DDos attacks, and as you say companies don't do it because it's unlikely to happen, then they are being short sighted as it happens every couple of months nowadaysAgain, you cannot realistically protect against DDoS attacks. There is no hacking involved, it is simply hiring bots to hammer a company's servers with thousands of Gb/s of requests. It can happen and has happened to multiple corporations that are bigger, richer and with better infrustructers than Sony. (Look how many major websites crashed on the Black Friday sales, and that was just shoppers trying to access the site that caused the outages, practically the same scenario). To get rid of them, you would have to change how the internet works entirely.
Companies do have protection against DDoS attacks, but that means spending $millions for something that is unlikely to happen and it is far, far easier and cheaper for a single individual to setup and hammer the servers with even more traffic.
Money buys everything doesn't it? So maybe they can invest a couple of millions in preventing DDos attacks, and as you say companies don't do it because it's unlikely to happen, then they are being short sighted as it happens every couple of months nowadays
If you got the balls to charge for your online service, you better make sure it's waterproof.
No, you're missing the point of what a denial of service attack is.Money buys everything doesn't it? So maybe they can invest a couple of millions in preventing DDos attacks, and as you say companies don't do it because it's unlikely to happen, then they are being short sighted as it happens every couple of months nowadays![]()
No, you're missing the point of what a denial of service attack is.
A denial of service attack is when the number of requests of a device to perform its normal tasks exceeds the number of requests that the device can handle at once - so it can no longer perform its normal tasks. Grab a calculator and start typing in calculations and it's fine. Get a second person to jab at the numbers while you're trying to do that and it's not - service has been denied. The calculator is still trying to do its job, but it can't output as normal while a second user is simultaneously trying to get information too.
Scale this up and you have a server farm capable of handling, say, a million concurrent connections. All you need for a denial of service is to flood it with 1,000,001 concurrent connections. This is achieved by building a "botnet" of compromised devices - computers with viruses on them - which you can direct to request information from the servers simultaneously. Upgrade your server farm to handle 2m concurrent connections and the botnet needs to expand to 2,000,001. Upgrade it to ten million and the botnet needs to expand to 10,000,001. The bigger botnets were running at 30m+ by the time PSN even existed, and even if Sony provided a server farm large enough to handle every SEN user to access its services simultaneously (which is economically unviable) a large botnet like Mariposa could take up a third of its time all the time.
A denial of service attack can be mitigated somewhat with software, but in doing so it will also restrict normal operations. The only way to stop or prevent a denial of service attack is to not provide any normal operations to anyone.
So you are absolutely sure that there is no way at all to prevent a DDos attack? Even if you have some of the brightest minds sit together and brainstorm there is no hope for the human gaming race?No, you're missing the point of what a denial of service attack is.
A denial of service attack is when the number of requests of a device to perform its normal tasks exceeds the number of requests that the device can handle at once - so it can no longer perform its normal tasks. Grab a calculator and start typing in calculations and it's fine. Get a second person to jab at the numbers while you're trying to do that and it's not - service has been denied. The calculator is still trying to do its job, but it can't output as normal while a second user is simultaneously trying to get information too.
Scale this up and you have a server farm capable of handling, say, a million concurrent connections. All you need for a denial of service is to flood it with 1,000,001 concurrent connections. This is achieved by building a "botnet" of compromised devices - computers with viruses on them - which you can direct to request information from the servers simultaneously. Upgrade your server farm to handle 2m concurrent connections and the botnet needs to expand to 2,000,001. Upgrade it to ten million and the botnet needs to expand to 10,000,001. The bigger botnets were running at 30m+ by the time PSN even existed, and even if Sony provided a server farm large enough to handle every SEN user to access its services simultaneously (which is economically unviable) a large botnet like Mariposa could take up a third of its time all the time.
A denial of service attack can be mitigated somewhat with software, but in doing so it will also restrict normal operations. The only way to stop or prevent a denial of service attack is to not provide any normal operations to anyone.
Yes - turn the device off.So you are absolutely sure that there is no way at all to prevent a DDos attack? Even if you have some of the brightest minds sit together and brainstorm there is no hope for the human gaming race?