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Anonymous has denied any involvement in the PlayStation Network outage. [14] However, Sony announced on May 4, 2011, "We discovered that the intruders had planted a file on one of our Sony Online Entertainment servers named "Anonymous" with the words "We are Legion." [15]
The 2011 PlayStation Network outage (sometimes referred to as the PSN Hack) was the result of an "external intrusion" on Sony's PlayStation Network and Qriocity services, in which personal details from approximately 77 million accounts were compromised and prevented users of PlayStation 3 and PlayStation Portable consoles from accessing the service.
Sony’s game division this week notified about 6,800 current and former employees, as well as affected family members, that their personal info may have been exposed in a hack earlier this year. ...
Sony quickly organized internal teams to try to manage the loss of data to the Internet, and contacted the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) and the private security firm FireEye to help protect Sony employees whose personal data was exposed by the hack, repair the damaged computer infrastructure and trace the source of the leak. [14]
Sony Interactive Entertainment did not immediately respond to a request for comment. Information about Sony’s … Sony Discloses Data Breach That Exposed Info on Almost 6,800 Employees and ...
LulzSec (a contraction for Lulz Security) is [1] a grey hat computer hacking group that claimed responsibility for several high profile attacks, including the compromise of user accounts from PlayStation Network in 2011.
Pages in category "Sony litigation" The following 11 pages are in this category, out of 11 total. ... Sony Computer Entertainment, Inc. v. Connectix Corp.
The case is In re 23andMe Inc Customer Data Security Breach Litigation, U.S. District Court, Northern District of California, No. 24-md-03098. (Reporting by Jonathan Stempel in New York; editing ...