@Smudger:
This is again a little tricky as although it wasn't mean't to do half the stuff it can, as long as you own the console and can't harm/effect anyone in a negative way
And thats unfortunately where the line has to be drawn. if you want to hack your own system at the cost of making it unusable for updates or online or whatnot, because you really want an emulator or some PC software on there, well… its really not supposed to do that, but your risking your own things and voiding your warranty blocking yourself from future features. Thats fine I guess (I don't get it personally...) there's a cost and a risk to it, whatever, but with the massive interconnection of things now... well, where do you draw the line on personal hacks, since a lot of them ARE malicious and ARE security concerns, as this situation is kind of proving?
Where is the line between having an N64 on your PSP and getting somebody's credit card numbers? ANd how do you determine that line and if its been crossed? A break in security is a break in security. And even if you say "well, this guy would never do the BAD stuff with his illegal hacking" doesn't mean THAT guy won't.
Yeah I can understand both sides of the coin on this particular argument, but what about the one that started it all off a few weeks ago?
I'm not entirely up to speed I guess, what specifically set this all off?