Sony's PS3 has been so far immune to being hacked to allow copied games to work, but a new device promises to do just this, without the need to solder, install, flash anything.
The new device, simply an USB drive that's now for sale for $170, promises to "jailbreak" the PS3 and allow games to be dumped to a FAT32 HDD, and then played back later. 150 PS3 games have already been tested to work with the system.
However, Sony is apparently already aware of the problem and upcoming firmware updates are expected to block the device. Sony recently introduced smaller, automatic updates, which may or may not be related to efforts to combat the PS Jailbreak device.
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The new device, simply an USB drive that's now for sale for $170, promises to "jailbreak" the PS3 and allow games to be dumped to a FAT32 HDD, and then played back later. 150 PS3 games have already been tested to work with the system.
However, Sony is apparently already aware of the problem and upcoming firmware updates are expected to block the device. Sony recently introduced smaller, automatic updates, which may or may not be related to efforts to combat the PS Jailbreak device.
More:
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