When Sony decided to support SOPA for attention and business, a lot of Internet users got angry and many people stopped buying their products. The company found a large decline in their products being sold. Because of this, Sony stopped supporting SOPA. It was a huge mistake trying to support something the whole world hates. This shows you not to try to show off by supporting something you don't even know about. That wasn't the end though. A hacker has been reported to try to hack Sony's stores and main websites so that everything is free. The hacker goes by the name of "Anonymous" and is in a hacking team called "Team Anonymous". They are a group of professional hackers. They've took down the Playstation Network already and they threatened Sony that they will do the same for Sony.
I've learned to not be selfish and greedy like Sony and to know about something first and the outcome of an event. I've learned that hacking can sometimes be useful, especially forcing companies to withdraw their support for something almost half the world uses. I've learned that you can actually hack a whole, secure, website of a huge company with a torrent file. Internet users would support the hackers no matter what and so would I.
I've learned to not be selfish and greedy like Sony and to know about something first and the outcome of an event. I've learned that hacking can sometimes be useful, especially forcing companies to withdraw their support for something almost half the world uses. I've learned that you can actually hack a whole, secure, website of a huge company with a torrent file. Internet users would support the hackers no matter what and so would I.
Russel, Jon. "Anonymous Reportedly Planning Major Sony Hack." The Next Web - International Technology News, Business & Culture. The Next Web, 18 Jan. 2012. Web. 30 Jan. 2012. <http://thenextweb.com/insider/2012/01/18/report-anonymous-planning-major-hack-on-sony-over-its-sopa-support/?awesm=tnw.to_1Cqka>.
No comments:
Post a Comment