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A security firm has said that recent discussions on underground Internet forums suggest that the recently stolen PlayStation data belonging to millions of gamers is now up for sale.

An article posted late Thursday on The New York Times website pointed toward increasing evidence that hackers had gained possession of the credit card details of millions of Sony PlayStation gamers.

The news follows the recent attack on Sony’s PlayStation Network and Qriocity, which prompted Sony to temporarily shut the services down. It is thought that the personal data of more than 75 million users was stolen by hackers who infiltrated the system. The sensitive information included names, addresses, dates of birth and passwords.

The Times‘ Nick Bilton says that according to security researchers, recent discussions on several underground Internet forums seemed to suggest that hackers had gained possession of as many as 2.2 million credit card numbers belonging to Sony customers.

The senior threat researcher at security firm Trend Micro, Kevin Stevens, said that the forums indicated the hackers had a database containing the personal information, and that they were hoping to sell it “for upwards of $100,000.” Apparently the hackers had even tried to sell the information back to Sony, but they didn’t receive a reply from the Japanese electronics company.

“Although several researchers confirmed the forum discussions, it was impossible to verify their contents or the existence of the database,” The Times‘ report says.

Sony has claimed that the credit card data is encrypted, but Mathew Solnik, a security consultant with iSEC Partners, a firm that monitors hacker forums, had this to say: “Sony is saying the credit cards were encrypted, but we are hearing that the hackers made it into the main database, which would have given them access to everything, including credit card numbers.” Researchers think that hackers could have gained access to Sony’s servers by first hacking the PS3 games console, Solnik told The Times.

This week a lawsuit was filed against Sony for the security breach of its PlayStation Network and loss of user data. In a post on its PlayStation blog on Tuesday, Sony warned gamers to be “especially aware of email, telephone, and postal mail scams that ask for personal or sensitive information. Sony will not contact you in any way, including by email, asking for your credit card number, social security number or other personally identifiable information.”

It’ll be interesting to see just how many PlayStation gamers return to the network once it’s back up and running. The answer to the following question, posted on the PlayStation blog on Thursday, may prove decisive (once the company actually decides):

“Q: Will there be a goodwill gesture for the time we haven’t been able to utilize PSN/Qriocity?

A: We are currently evaluating ways to show appreciation for your extraordinary patience as we work to get these services back online.”

Showing 13 comments

  1. mnaxi at 8:35am 3rd June 2011 Nothing like good bash at ms for anything that happens in the world. I love it. Although i think it could be something to do with the chinese govenment?
  2. Rick Gifford at 7:22am 7th May 2011 Has anyone stopped to that maybe Microsoft had something to do with this...? or that maybe just maybe its an inside job...but as long as they get psn back up before I'm brainwashed into buying a microsoft product all should b well haha
  3. Rick Gifford at 7:21am 7th May 2011 Has anyone stopped to that maybe Microsoft had something to do with this...? or that maybe just maybe its an inside job...but as long as they get psn back up before I'm brainwashed into buying a microsoft product all should b well haha
  4. John at 9:44pm 30th April 2011 I want my psn back and wanna play online I always use pre paid psn cards never credit or debit please Sony bring back psn soon and give us a compensation for our troubles we deserve it as loyal customers
  5. Eric Pereira at 8:08pm 29th April 2011 @Rob this hack is old news....The hackers that told Sony it was vulnerable 2 months ago (all the data (even CVV numbers was in plain text)) should get medals, at least they didn't do anything malicious with the data obtained...Sony not patching their holes is disgraceful.
  6. Maxwell Evans at 5:16pm 29th April 2011 I doubt I'll waste money on it though.
  7. Maxwell Evans at 5:15pm 29th April 2011 Sony has been failing big time lately. And now, if I buy a PS3, I'm hacking the shit out of it.
  8. MJNYM at 10:11am 29th April 2011 I went ahead and just cancelled my credit card since I had used it once before. This is some bs SONY. I'm sticking to those prepaid cards once the PSN comes back on.
  9. George Nichitean at 4:04pm 29th April 2011 Won't buy from Sony nothing never again.
  10. Adam Hughes at 3:06pm 29th April 2011 @rob no offense but... You are naive if you think that. Sony would emphatically deny it if they really didn't lose cc numbers, the simple fact that they haven't is evidence enough that someone was able to get to them. This new info only confirms...
  11. Roberto Rob Knives Nieves at 3:00pm 29th April 2011 Unless SONY says that they detected some information that was stolen, im going to say that the hackers are producing false stories to provide some kind of negating distraction. Plus, it should be from the firm that sony got involved and not some other one.
  12. Jason Gehrman at 2:54pm 29th April 2011 Hackers are such asses.
  13. Daniel Rodriguez at 3:41am 29th April 2011 to show there appreciation they should get the black ops map pack (escalation/call of the dead) the same day Xbox gets it and give it out free i would be happy XD i know the software would be treyarcs but i dont mean treyarc give it out free i say Sony should pay for it that would be great XD
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