2triky wrote:Hehe. What? The road to nowhere...
I'd say something more like "marching out to sea on yesterdays pier."
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Coligny wrote:.
(starting to consider buying a PS3 now that the price have gone sufficiently low... do you know if a euro version of GTurismo would work online from japan ?)
Sony said Thursday that hackers stole details belonging to hundreds of its mobile unit clients, the latest in a string of cyberattacks to hit the embattled Japanese electronics giant.
A group calling itself “Null\Crew” said it had attacked a mobile communications server, with a Sony spokesman confirming the cyber thieves had grabbed information belonging to 400 customers in mainland China and Taiwan.
Null\Crew, which reportedly has links to international computer hacking group Anonymous, posted online usernames, e-mails and some passwords along with a statement critical of the Japanese firm.
“Sony, we are dearly disappointed in your security,” it said, adding that it had gained control of eight Sony servers, which could not be immediately confirmed.
“Not even your customers can trust you,” it added.
The company spokesman said the incident was being investigated and added that the server with client details belonged to an unnamed “third party”, and not Sony itself.
In April last year Sony suffered a massive data breach that compromised more than 100 million accounts and forced it to temporarily halt its PlayStation Network and Qriocity services.
And in October, the firm suspended 93,000 accounts on its online entertainment networks, which let users play videogames and watch movies, after detecting a wave of unauthorized sign-in attempts.
The entertainment giant has been battling to restore consumer trust after the initial security gaffe, with a string of subsequent attacks on websites including in Greece, Thailand and Indonesia.
In another incident, a group of hackers known as Lulz Security in June said they had compromised more than one million passwords, email addresses and other information from SonyPictures.com.
FG Lurker wrote:....it would be nice to see a bit of ass-kicking coming out of Japan again...
Screwed-down Hairdo wrote:FG Lurker wrote:....it would be nice to see a bit of ass-kicking coming out of Japan again...
We could always start with Hashimoto...
cstaylor wrote:Screwed-down Hairdo wrote:FG Lurker wrote:....it would be nice to see a bit of ass-kicking coming out of Japan again...
We could always start with Hashimoto...
I think he said, "ass-kicking coming out of Japan" not "kick that ass out of Japan".
FG Lurker wrote:Ya know, I hate the Sony of days gone by but I'm so tired of Apple and Samsung domination that I'd like to see Sony get their shit together and make a comeback. They have the brand to do it. If they produced some seriously kickass phones and tablets they could be a good representative of Japan Inc.
Unfortunately I doubt they are capable of it, but it would be nice to see a bit of ass-kicking coming out of Japan again.
gaijinpunch wrote:FG Lurker wrote:Ya know, I hate the Sony of days gone by but I'm so tired of Apple and Samsung domination that I'd like to see Sony get their shit together and make a comeback. They have the brand to do it. If they produced some seriously kickass phones and tablets they could be a good representative of Japan Inc.
Unfortunately I doubt they are capable of it, but it would be nice to see a bit of ass-kicking coming out of Japan again.
I may be in the minority but I mainly remember the Sony of the 90's and on, in which the build quality of most the Sony products I purchased was not worth the price. Plenty of my stuff broke... enough to write them off as a company.
The representative of a major European investor in Sony recalls his meeting with Iide very unfavorably.
“I came to Japan to talk to Mr. Iide about our growing concerns with Sony’s direction. We had dinner together. I wanted to talk about profit margins; he wanted to talk about the wine we were having. He struck me as a clueless.”
When the investor pointed out that Sony’s operating profits on electronic products were roughly 2-4% and that Samsung was making similar products at a 30% profit margin, Iide hushed him by saying, “They make the parts for our products. We put them together. It’s the difference between a steel maker and an automobile maker. We make the automobiles.”
The investor countered, “Well, I’ve got news for you—the people you laid off from the car plant are now working at the steel mill, and soon the steel mills will be building cars with your technology.”
The warning was not heeded. It was 2004 when they last met, and while the iPod was increasingly becoming the to-go platform for mobile music and multi-media contents, Sony or rather Iide, didn’t take it seriously.
When Sony announced that it would be appointing Howard Stringer to be the new CEO in 2005, the investor sent Stringer a message and offer of support via Sony’s Japan office. Stringer was in charge of the company for several months before the investor heard from Stringer himself that the message had not gone through. The investor drastically reduced their interests in Sony.
“We still have shares in the company so I don’t want to say much more but it was clear to me by 2004 that Sony was a company at war with itself and that the seeds of its downfall had already been planted by Iide and nurtured by his cronies, and that they were quickly taking root.”
Coligny wrote:ONCE AGAIN:
The Vita is pointless... they fucked up enough with the PSP... who could barely go online...
TOKYO (Kyodo) -- Sony Corp. said Wednesday its Chairman of the Board Howard Stringer and former President Ryoji Chubachi will retire from its board upon approval at a shareholders' meeting on June 20. Sony announced three candidates as new members of the board, including Eiko Harada, chairman and president of McDonald's Holdings Co. (Japan) Ltd., and plans to reappoint its President Kazuo Hirai to the 13-member board.
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