Showing posts with label Sony. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sony. Show all posts

British hacker Kayla admits to attacks on Sony, Murdoch, Nintendo


A British computer hacker pleaded guilty on Tuesday to cyber attacks on targets including Sony, Nintendo, Rupert Murdoch's News International and the Arizona State Police.

Ryan Ackroyd's plea meant his planned jury trial did not go ahead and, as a result, the court did not hear any evidence on the motivation behind the attacks he made using the persona of a 16-year-old girl named Kayla as part of hacking group LulzSec.

Dressed in a tracksuit bottom and t-shirt, with a large tattoo on his arm and crew-cut hair, Ackroyd spoke only to identify himself and to enter his plea. Ackroyd, 26, was arrested in 2011 with three other British young men in connection with an international cyber crime spree by LulzSec, a splinter group of hacking collective Anonymous.

Cracking down on hacking

The other three had already pleaded guilty to several charges including cyber attacks on the CIA and Britain's Serious Organised Crime Agency (SOCA).

Anonymous, and LulzSec in particular, made international headlines in late 2010 when they launched what they called the "first cyber war" in retaliation for attempts to shut down the WikiLeaks website.

Ackroyd faced four charges but pleaded guilty to just one. Prosecutors said they would not pursue the other charges. Ackroyd and his three fellow hackers will be sentenced on May 14, judge Deborah Taylor said.

Mustafa Al-Bassam, 18, and Jake Davis, 20, had both pleaded guilty to two counts while Ryan Cleary, 21, had pleaded guilty to six counts including that he attacked Pentagon computers operated by the U.S. Air Force.

Cleary, Al-Bassam and Davis admitted to launching so-called distributed denial of service (DDoS) attacks in which websites are flooded with traffic to make them crash.

Ackroyd denied taking part in DDoS attacks but admitted, as did the three others, to hacking into computer systems, obtaining confidential data and redirecting legitimate website visitors to sites hosted by the hackers.

The targets listed in the charge to which Ackroyd pleaded guilty also included Britain's National Health Service, the U.S. public broadcaster PBS and 20th Century Fox.

The defendants are free on bail pending their sentencing, under the condition that they do not access the Internet.

Cleary was indicted by a federal grand jury in Los Angeles last June but U.S. authorities have indicated they would not seek his extradition as he was being prosecuted in Britain on the same charges.

Report by : Reuters

Sony sells Tokyo office building for $1.2 billion in a bid to raise funds



Sony said Thursday it has sold one of its main buildings in Tokyo for $1.2 billion as the embattled Japanese electronics giant offloads assets to help repair its tattered balance sheet.

The news comes after the company in January announced the sale of its US headquarters in Manhattan for more than $1.0 billion while this month it also sold part of its online medical services unit.

Sony said its had sold the 25-storey central Tokyo building, which houses its television unit, to Nippon Building Fund and an unnamed Japanese institutional investor for 111 billion yen ($1.2 billion) and would earn it a profit of 41 billion yen.

"Sony is transforming its business portfolio and reorganising its assets in an effort to strengthen its corporate structure," the company said in a statement. "This sale was conducted as a part of this reorganisation."

Sony said it would remain in the central Tokyo building for five years under a leasing agreement.

Earlier this month, the firm said it would book a $1.2 billion gain from selling part of an online medical services unit, as it eyes a full-year profit after four years in the red.

Sony has announced a massive corporate overhaul that includes thousands of job cuts, the sale of a chemical division and an investment in Olympus to tap the camera and medical equipment maker's strong foothold in the global market for endoscopes.

The maker of Bravia televisions and PlayStation games consoles lost 456.66 billion yen in the last fiscal year, but says it is on track for a 20 billion yen net profit in the year to March.

Last week, Sony announced it would launch its PlayStation 4 system as it faces increasing competition from cheap or sometimes free downloadable video games for smartphones and tablets.

The company's hard times saw its stock value tumble below 1,000 yen a share last year, for the first time since the era of the Walkman.

The stock has since come back, with Sony shares up 3.56 percent at 1,338 yen on Thursday in Tokyo.

Japan's electronics sector has suffered myriad problems including a strong yen, slowing demand in key export markets, fierce competition especially in the struggling TV division and strategic mistakes.

The industry has been awash in huge losses and credit rating downgrades, with rival Sharp saying last year it would put up real estate as collateral for bank loans including its Osaka headquarters to stay afloat.

Sony to introduce a tablet to challenge Apple


Sony's Xperia Tablet Z device.

Sony, the electronics maker struggling after four straight annual losses, will introduce a new tablet computer in Japan this year as it tries to lure customers from Apple and Samsung.

The Xperia Tablet Z will be 6.9 millimeters thick, weigh 495 grams and have a 10.1-inch (26-centimetre) display, Sony said in a statement. The waterproof device may debut in Japan as soon as March before appearing elsewhere, Noriko Shoji, a Tokyo-based spokeswoman, said by phone. The price hasn't been decided, she said.

Sony chief executive officer Kazuo Hirai is focusing on mobile devices to revive the company, whose TV unit has been unprofitable for eight straight fiscal years. The Tokyo-based company debuted its first tablet in 2011, making it the last of the world's top 10 laptop makers to tap surging demand triggered by Apple's iPad.

"It's a rational strategy for Sony to focus on mobile devices including tablets as its TV business is no longer a cash cow," said Keita Wakabayashi, an analyst at Mito Securities in Tokyo. "Still, the tricky part of the tablet business is that products can conflict with laptop computers on one hand and smartphones on the other."

Tablet demand

Worldwide tablet shipments probably totaled 120 million last year and may reach 340 million by 2016, market researcher IHS's iSuppli said in December.

In October, Apple introduced a smaller version of the iPad with a 7.9-inch screen and prices starting at $369. Sony also faces competition from Amazon.com's updated Kindle Fire and Google's Nexus 7.

Sony got 18 per cent of sales from mobile products and communications in the quarter ended September, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. It bolstered the division by buying out Ericsson AB's stake in a venture making mobile phones last year.

Report by : MARIKO YASU

Sony may be developing a 6.44-inch phablet


It looks like Samsung's Galaxy Note line-up is going to face some competition. According to Panda App, a picture has leaked recently, indicating that Sony is working on a phablet device of its own. Judging by the picture, it looks like the company wants to escalate the screen size battle with a whopping 6.44-inch screen.

Judging by the size of the screen, it can be assumed that the screen will be full HD 1080p. The picture also indicates that the phone will feature a very skinny bezel. It should be worth noting, though, that the picture is definitely not a confirmation that Sony is working on such a device. For all we know, the picture is of a prototype that may never see a release. It could also be a faked image, so as usual, rumours are to be taken with a pinch of salt.

Sony may be upping the ante for screen size (image credit: digi-wo)

During CES, Sony had unveiled its new flagship device—the Xperia Z. The company is joining the current trend of stuffing a 1080p resolution in a 5-inch screen. This gives the device a pixel resolution of 443 ppi. The effect this may have on the battery life of the phone is yet to be seen.

The main selling point of the device will undoubtedly be the 13 megapixel camera; the camera gives users the ability to record HDR video. The phone is powered by a Qualcomm Snapdragon S4 Pro processor and is LTE-capable. The company has announced a global launch for the device this quarter.

Here are some of the specifications of the Xperia Z:

  • 5-inch screen with a 1080p resolution
  • 4G LTE, EDGE, Wi-Fi, NFC
  • GPS with A-GPS support
  • Bluetooth 4.0
  • 13 megapixel camera with HDR recording and 2 megapixel front-facing camera


Going by earlier reports, Samsung seems to be doing some screen size escalation of its own. According to the report, Galaxy Note III will be pushing even further in terms of screen size, with a whopping 6.3-inch display. This is a considerable jump compared to the 5.5-inch screen on Galaxy Note II. Another key feature of Note III will be that it will run on the Exynos 5 Octa chip that Samsung had showcased at CES 2013. It is based on the ARM big.LITTLE/Cortex A-15 architecture and is designed to be a low powered, high performance mobile processor.

According to Samsung, the performance of the chip is twice than that of anything available in the market today when it comes to 3D gaming. While the company hasn't unveiled full details about the chip yet, this chip may be able to run dual quad-core setups on a 28nm process. The Exynos 5 Octa will likely also power the rumoured Galaxy S IV.
Report by : Shunal Doke

Sony might not reveal PS4 until Microsoft has announced next Xbox


If you believe the hype, Sony and Microsoft will be announcing their new consoles this year. We think both will, along with many other gamers and analysts out there. With the next generation seemingly on our doorstep, the only question now is which console will come first. Speaking to The Times (as reported by IGN), Sony CEO Kaz Hirai may have just answered that question by suggesting his company will let Microsoft go first.

“Why go first,” Hirai asked, “when your competitors can look at your specifications and come up with something better?” That’s all he said, leaving us to wonder if Sony will indeed wait until Microsoft has revealed the next Xbox before it announces the PlayStation 4. Of course, whatever advantage Microsoft would gain from Sony announcing its next-gen console first seems minimal at best, as most of the hardware in the next Xbox will likely be mostly – if not entirely – final by that point anyway.

Then again, it isn’t as if being last out of the gate is a bad thing for a new console. Out of the big three for this generation, the Wii was the last to launch in the US. If you concern yourself with consoles at all, it’s likely you know how that turned out. Just the same, the Dreamcast was the first console to launch in the prior generation, and that didn’t end so well for Sega, with the company deciding to leave the console business altogether just a couple of years after it launched.

Still, with all signs pointing to an E3 2013 announcement for the next Xbox, it makes you wonder when Sony will announce the PlayStation 4 if Hirai really is planning to wait for Microsoft’s own reveal. Perhaps we won’t see the PS4 until the Tokyo Game Show this year? We’ll just have to wait and see, so sit tight and try not to let the anticipation get to you.

Report by : Eric Abent

Sony announces thinnest-ever tablet to lure customers from Apple and Samsung


Japanese electronics giant Sony has announced it will launch a new tablet this year as it tries to lure customers from Apple and Samsung. The Sony Xperia Z may debut in Japan by March before appearing elsewhere, a spokeswoman said.

Reprot by : ET BUREAU