PSN hacking fallout continues

On the downside, 2.2 million credit card numbers may (repeat may) be in the hands of hackers after the Sony PSN data breach. On the upside, everyone’s trophies are fine.

There have been several updates since our last report on the Sony breach. The company says that all credit card numbers stored on its servers were in encrypted form, meaning they will be of little use to hackers even if they are stolen, of which Sony says there is no evidence. (That does raise the question of whether other user data which is known to have been compromised was encrypted and, if not, why not.)

There are also several reports that the hackers claim to have 2.2 million credit card numbers, are looking for $100,000 for the lot, and have offered Sony first refusal on buying them back. Some reports even say the hackers claim to have the three-digit security codes from the back of each card, though that seems very unlikely and Sony has flatly denied that these codes were stored in any form.

Several sites are also reporting readers saying they have suffered credit card fraud since the attack and are blaming Sony. To be fair, with 77 million people involved, the chances are you’re going to be having fraud somewhere almost all the time, so it would take a huge number of cases before you could say with any confidence that these attacks are related to the Sony breach.

Back on the gaming side of things, Sony has confirmed that all PSN game settings and data will be restored in full once the network is back in action. As well as existing trophies being restored, Sony guarantees any trophies players have earned on offline games during the outage will be synced up safely when they go back online. Ridiculous as it may seem given the high stakes of the data breach, it has to be said that this news will save Sony from an even worse public relations disaster.

As for compensation, Sony has said: ” We are currently evaluating ways to show appreciation for your extraordinary patience as we work to get these services back online.” Naturally that’s going to be tricky for a free service, and a cash bonus looks out of the question. It might be a smart move to give everyone a short period of free access to PlayStation Plus (while extending the subscriptions of existing members appropriately): as well as being an effective goodwill gesture, it could serve as excellent “try before you buy” marketing.

Sony has also said it is working on a “make good plan” for players of DC Universe Online and Free Realms, which of course have been completely unplayable during the outage.



Super Mario Bros: Real Life Edition

Hmmm, I don’t want to question this dude’s sanity, but those mushrooms he ate at the entrance of the park are certainly not 1-Up mushrooms!

[Via Nerd Bastards]

Building Super Hard Drives with Depleted Uranium

Researchers from the University of Nottingham have come up with an idea which would allow to build “super” hard drives using a uranium compound. Check it out:

[Via [H]]



Dark Matters Illustrated [Video]

Recently, Jorge Cham from Phdcomics.com sat down with Physicists Daniel Whiteson and Jonathan Feng to talk about Dark Matter and how Cern’s collider is helping answer the question: What is it? Check out the cool video he then created to go along with the recording.

[Phdcomics]

Meekakitty’s Bacon Song Sizzles!

You guys love bacon, right? And you love Meekakitty, right? Well here’s a two-for-one then!

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k3DAjQhChRs&feature=channel_video_title

Data is White and Nerdy

Yep, I’m pretty sure that when Weird Al composed “White and Nerdy,” he had Data from Star Trek: TNG in mind from the very beginning.

[Via Neatorama]

Orc Army T-Shirt

We want you for Orc Army! Join the second battalion today! Zug Zug!

[Get it @ Splitreason.com – 10% off with promo code “geeksaresexy”]

Cheap New Sensor Diagnoses Infection by Smell

And in even more medical sensor news, researchers at the University of Illinois have developed a low-cost method of detecting bacterial infection using an artificial nose. To sniff out the particular strain of bacterium, a broad-sensitivity array is attached to the underside of a Petri dish lid and a sample of the patient’s blood is swabbed onto a standard agar medium. The 36 points of cross-reactive pigment  change color when they detect specific chemicals–the by-products of bacterial growth.

Each detectable strain carries its own pattern on the array, which is read by running the cultured plates on a flatbed scanner.

By “sniffing out” the invading microbes, this process would cut standard blood culturing process from around 72 hours to three or so, and costs far less in terms of both resource and labor while also providing a much-needed improvement in diagnostic turn-around. The technology is currently being tested for accuracy in detecting lung cancer and sinus infection using breath analysis.

[source: 1, 2] [images: 1, 2]