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Handhelds Portables (Games) Sony Hardware

Dark Alex Releases 4.01 M33 Firmware For PSP 58

Croakyvoice writes "Dark Alex, the PSP hacker from Spain, and his Team M33 have released a new version of the custom firmware for the PSP, which now supports the very latest official firmware from Sony. Benefits for the end user include the ability to play the many hundreds of games, demos, applications and emulators written by the homebrew community for the PSP."
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Dark Alex Releases 4.01 M33 Firmware For PSP

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  • by raventh1 ( 581261 ) on Sunday June 29, 2008 @02:07PM (#23991965)

    Software development != Piracy, thanks!

  • by Anonymous Coward on Sunday June 29, 2008 @02:33PM (#23992195)

    Then you haven't been looking on the right news sites. Have you tried a PSP news site? Or even a gaming news site? It might not get coverage on a general gaming site, but it would get coverage on a PSP news site.

    And yes, news is news. What is your point? Sports news is news, but you wouldn't see it showing up on Slashdot. Gaming news is news, and unless it's something big, it shouldn't really show up on Slashdot. See, if this were the very first custom firmware for the PSP, it would be big enough. But it's not. It's just the new increment of an old software.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Sunday June 29, 2008 @06:03PM (#23993763)

    then don't fight Sony on their own turf. Get a gp2x or a gp32 and play games on a portable machine that's open from the get-go.

  • by EdIII ( 1114411 ) * on Sunday June 29, 2008 @06:36PM (#23993969)

    Actually you are the one that is completely, totally, and absolutely wrong.

    It is impossible to perform the act of piracy by installing your own software on a Sony PSP when you BOUGHT THE PSP. You OWN the HARDWARE. It is YOUR HARDWARE. You have the ABSOLUTE RIGHT TO YOUR HARDWARE.

    There is no such thing as hardware "piracy". Hardware "piracy" is actually theft of property which is completely different. You also cannot perform the act of piracy as it relates to the official Sony firmware, since you received that with your paid-for PSP in the first place.

    Software Piracy would involve "stealing" somebody's software. That is not taking place here.

    Modifying your PSP firmware is at best, a violation of an agreement between you and Sony. It is a breach of contract, which is not remotely the same as an infringement on copyrights.

    Personally, I would consider it to be a form of civil disobediance. I don't think Sony, or any company, has the right to tell you what to do with hardware that you own. The specific language in the EULA should be deemed improper and unenforceable in court. I actually think it would be too and there is no case precedence that I am aware of.

    Would Toyota get away with selling you a car and telling you that you can only drive it to certain locations? At certain speeds? On certain days? With specific radio stations turned on? What about after market modifications on most popular cars? Would those auto manufacturers get away with creating restrictions on the after market industry?

    Of course not. You own the car. Well just the same, you own the PSP. The only exception for corporations, is to lease the hardware. That is done ALL the time, and allows those corporations to ethically and morally enforce restrictions upon the use of the hardware.

    So the reality is that you are wrong. The flamebait and troll modifier is justified in your case since it is highly offensive to label owners of PSPs as "criminals" simply for wanting to use homebrew applications and custom modified firmwares on their own property.

    Software Piracy is a very specific act and has nothing to do with "hacking" your own hardware. I even object to the use of the term, since I strongly believe that you cannot perform the act of "hacking" on your own property.

    In the future I would suggest you think about what you want to say a little more carefully.

  • by Your.Master ( 1088569 ) on Monday June 30, 2008 @03:01AM (#23997267)

    Although a troll, I think the parent post is also incredibly insightful. There is a common opinion in slashdot that EULAs are bullshit, and a common opinion that the GPL is not bullshit, and many here seem to hold both beliefs at once.

    Why is one more valid than the other? I don't mean to imply that it isn't or that it is, I'm just honestly curious.

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