Microsoft Xbox Live back up, Sony PlayStation Network still down
(Reuters) - Microsoft Corp's Xbox Live was back up on Friday while Sony Corp's PlayStation Network remained offline for a second day after a hacker group claimed responsibility for attacking the two Internet gaming services.
Gamers on Xbox Live and PlayStation Network experienced connection problems and delays on Christmas Day, one of the busiest times of the year for the video game industry. The majority of game and console sales are generated during the end-year holiday shopping season.
Hacker collective “Lizard Squad” has claimed responsibility for taking down Sony’s PlayStation Network and Microsoft’s Xbox Live on Christmas and Christmas Eve, to the dismay of thousands of gamers.
As of Friday morning, PlayStation Network is still down, and Xbox Live service is "limited."
Lizard Squad is not hacking these services, but it is launching massive distributed denial of service (DDoS) attacks that overload servers with bogus requests.
Another hacker group, “The Finest Squad,” is trying to offset these attacks by DDoS'ing Lizard Squad's servers to stop these attacks at the source.
Sony and Microsoft are scrambling to upgrade the security on their systems — even though neither company has said the downed networks are the result of a DDoS attack.
Lizard Squad spoke with WinBeta on Thursday via an encrypted connection, asking the group about its motivation and methodology. Here’s what it learned:
Taking down PlayStation Network and Xbox Live started “for the laughs,” but eventually the collective found a cause to rally behind — forcing these companies to upgrade the security on their networks.
Lizard Squad chose Christmas Eve and Christmas Day because it believed “it would anger and reach the largest amount of people.”
The gang considered taking down Nintendo’s online service, but did not, with no particular reason given.
When asked if the group would consider addressing other targets, Lizard Squad said it “could take down NASDAQ if they wanted to damage the economy,” but said that’s not its goal.
The easier game network to take down was Microsoft’s Xbox Live. Sony had apparently upgraded its security recently, which took “a bit of time to work around,” but Microsoft had “almost nothing” in terms of security.
Lizard Squad has not said when the attacks would stop: It said they would continue until the companies “learned from their security issues.”
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