- 44,185
- Blackburn
- Furinkazen_54
I just got taken out.
There was notice for maintenance for the last 3 days (I know this because I needed to switch my main PS4 device, and thus needed to contact CS).
No DDoS attack, just normal schedule maintenance. Or DDoS attack if reading it as that makes the whole thing more interesting, if not false.
I think the maintence is to prepare the servers as much as they can for future updates. I'm guessing 2.0 and beyond.Yeah, I just got bumped while I was watching Arrow on Netflix. Thankfully, since it is in front of the PSN wall, I was able to finish the episode.
If a gun was pointed to your head, do you think that the maintenance was so that they could get the servers ready to push out v2.0?
I'm not up to date with online laws but isn't a Denial of service attack from a legal standpoint quite a major offence?
Servers are offline, you can't log in right now at all.I logged in fine earlier but then I was abruptly logged out. So I tried logging in again and was immediately logged out once more.
Then I got an epiphany, I would try holding an orange in one hand, balancing on one leg while at the same time watering my plants and correcting the satellite dish all simultaneously with logging in to PSN....hold on...I'm going to give it a go...
Well, just tried it. No luck
Well, they are talking DDoS over at Reddit, so I think the attack is real...There was notice for maintenance for the last 3 days (I know this because I needed to switch my main PS4 device, and thus needed to contact CS).
No DDoS attack, just normal schedule maintenance. Or DDoS attack if reading it as that makes the whole thing more interesting, if not false.
Not the same type of attack - that one was a full-on hack....SO, bye bye all Sony products. PC gaming it is for the next 2-3 months. (cus that is how long it took last time to get psn working again - here anyways)
Distributed Denial of Service Attacks
Sometimes a cracker uses anetwork of zombie computers to sabotage a specific Web site or server. The idea is pretty simple -- a cracker tells all the computers on his botnet to contact a specific server or Web site repeatedly. The sudden increase in traffic can cause the site to load very slowly for legitimate users. Sometimes the traffic is enough to shut the site down completely. We call this kind of an attack a Distributed Denial of Service (DDoS) attack.
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Do you want my opinion? ... No.Yeah, I just got bumped while I was watching Arrow on Netflix. Thankfully, since it is in front of the PSN wall, I was able to finish the episode.
If a gun was pointed to your head, do you think that the maintenance was so that they could get the servers ready to push out v2.0?
OK... That's not good AT ALL
This is serious you can't joke like that...Now PD can relax and blame hackers that we are not geting an update![]()
This is serious you can't joke like that...
Congratulations!
You are the first guest of my ignore list!