New Sony Patent Blocks Second Hand Games
New Sony Patent Blocks Second Hand Games
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Methuselah

Original Poster:

122 posts

190 months

Friday 4th January 2013
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Sony has reportedly patented technology that will prevent the use of second hand games on consoles.

The patent application was filed on 9 December 2012 by Sony Computer Entertainment Japan, and will work by linking individual game discs to a user's account without requiring a network connection meaning any future attempt to use this disc on another user's console won't work.

The use permission tag stores the terms of use of the game and determines whether a combination of the disc ID and the player ID conveyed from the reproduction device fulfils the terms of use or not.

The patent explains that games will come with contactless tags that will be read by your console in much the same way as modern bank cards. When a disc is first used, the disc ID and player ID will be stored on the tag. Every time the disc is used in future, the tag will check if the two ID’s match up and, if not, then the disc won’t work.

The document goes on to explain that such a device is part of Sony's ongoing efforts to deter second-hand games sales, and is a far simpler solution than always-on DRM or passwords.

It's worth noting that Sony has not confirmed the existence of the device, and the patent doesn't state what machine it will be used in, with later paragraphs also mentioning accessories and peripherals.

It does raise some concerns though. Firstly, the impact on game rental stores would be catastrophic as surely this means they'd no longer be able to do business? Given publishers' usual desire to keep retailers sweet by not undercutting them on prices and the like, this would be an unusual move.

There's also the issue of what happens should your console break and need replacing, or if you have more than one console. Will the games be linked to your PSN account, meaning they can still be used, or the console, meaning an entire new library of titles would need to be purchased?

http://m.uk.ign.com/articles/2013/01/03/report-new...

Hoofy

79,375 posts

305 months

Friday 4th January 2013
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Sony like to ps off their customers. Didn't they do something anti-customer before?

CJ1987

4,295 posts

175 months

Friday 4th January 2013
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tbh i doubt this is true because sony havent confirmed it yet

dudleybloke

20,553 posts

209 months

Friday 4th January 2013
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and they wonder why they get targeted by hackers so much.

CBR JGWRR

6,577 posts

172 months

Friday 4th January 2013
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What a stupid idea. Still, at least somebody will find a way around it.

Carfiend

3,186 posts

232 months

Friday 4th January 2013
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This is a console makers wet dream and if it turns out to be true I would not be surprised.

ajprice

32,213 posts

219 months

Friday 4th January 2013
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mrmr96

13,736 posts

227 months

Friday 4th January 2013
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Methuselah said:
It does raise some concerns though. Firstly, the impact on game rental stores would be catastrophic as surely this means they'd no longer be able to do business? Given publishers' usual desire to keep retailers sweet by not undercutting them on prices and the like, this would be an unusual move.

There's also the issue of what happens should your console break and need replacing, or if you have more than one console. Will the games be linked to your PSN account, meaning they can still be used, or the console, meaning an entire new library of titles would need to be purchased?

http://m.uk.ign.com/articles/2013/01/03/report-new...
You'd hope that the 2nd biggest console manufacturer in the WORLD would have thought of that...

SystemParanoia

14,343 posts

221 months

Friday 4th January 2013
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EA have their Pincode system that stops subsequent user playing their games online.

rip off

y2blade

56,265 posts

238 months

Friday 4th January 2013
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A few mainstream games have codes you have to put in to use online already, rendering them pretty much useless as a secndhand game once the code has been used by the first owner.




Buff Mchugelarge

3,316 posts

173 months

Friday 4th January 2013
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Surely this would almost 'force' the less well off PS3 owners to turn towards hacked or pirate consoles and dodgy copied games?
A silly move if they go ahead

wolves_wanderer

12,927 posts

260 months

Friday 4th January 2013
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Hoofy said:
Sony like to ps off their customers. Didn't they do something anti-customer before?
They had a "copy protection" on audio CDs that basically installed a rootkit on your PC.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sony_BMG_CD_copy_prot...

I fail to see the problem with selling games 2nd hand personally.

cH3wY

287 posts

168 months

Friday 4th January 2013
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y2blade said:
A few mainstream games have codes you have to put in to use online already, rendering them pretty much useless as a secndhand game once the code has been used by the first owner.
It's an absolute shambles really, rip off merchants all of them. They say that they dont recieve any of the revenue generated by the sale of a second hand game. It's the equivalent of a car manufacturer saying they don't recieve any money from the sale of a second hand car so they limit the car to 30mph unless you give them 1/5 - 1/6 of RRP. (Yes it's £6-8 to buy a code to unlock multiplayer on some games.)

So you'd purchase a second hand car with an RRP of £20k then have to pay £2-4k to get it delimited.

davepoth

29,395 posts

222 months

Friday 4th January 2013
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cH3wY said:
It's an absolute shambles really, rip off merchants all of them. They say that they dont recieve any of the revenue generated by the sale of a second hand game. It's the equivalent of a car manufacturer saying they don't recieve any money from the sale of a second hand car so they limit the car to 30mph unless you give them 1/5 - 1/6 of RRP. (Yes it's £6-8 to buy a code to unlock multiplayer on some games.)

So you'd purchase a second hand car with an RRP of £20k then have to pay £2-4k to get it delimited.
Actually that makes a bit of sense according to the business model they're using. Since Sony doesn't charge for online gaming, all of the costs of running multiplayer servers have to come out of the purchase cost. That's calculated to include a certain number of hours of online play before the owner buys something new and relegates it to the back of the shelf to gather dust.

If that game is resold, Sony (or whoever is running the server) have a bit of a problem because they're then losing money on the multiplayer service. Not handy.

Of course, Microsoft will include similar technology in the 720, and still charge. Gits.

wolves_wanderer

12,927 posts

260 months

Friday 4th January 2013
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davepoth said:
Actually that makes a bit of sense according to the business model they're using. Since Sony doesn't charge for online gaming, all of the costs of running multiplayer servers have to come out of the purchase cost. That's calculated to include a certain number of hours of online play before the owner buys something new and relegates it to the back of the shelf to gather dust.

If that game is resold, Sony (or whoever is running the server) have a bit of a problem because they're then losing money on the multiplayer service. Not handy.

Of course, Microsoft will include similar technology in the 720, and still charge. Gits.
They should be honest enough to charge separately for online (as MS do)

cH3wY

287 posts

168 months

Friday 4th January 2013
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davepoth said:
Actually that makes a bit of sense according to the business model they're using. Since Sony doesn't charge for online gaming, all of the costs of running multiplayer servers have to come out of the purchase cost. That's calculated to include a certain number of hours of online play before the owner buys something new and relegates it to the back of the shelf to gather dust.

If that game is resold, Sony (or whoever is running the server) have a bit of a problem because they're then losing money on the multiplayer service. Not handy.

Of course, Microsoft will include similar technology in the 720, and still charge. Gits.
So you would be happy having to pay the manufacturer a commission on top of the purchase price of a second hand car? You wouldn't. They should just charge it separately from the start, Sony already have this service, it's called Playstation Plus and its £40 a year. They shouldn't offer the 'free service' if they can't afford it. The entire point of online playstation gaming being free was as a selling point vs the Xbox who charge £40 a year. Extra costs providing the free service should have been recouped from extra sales generated because of this selling point.

dudleybloke

20,553 posts

209 months

Friday 4th January 2013
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plus if its a 2nd hand game it doenst put their servers under anymore load as theres still only one player per disc, just a different name.

CDP

8,019 posts

277 months

Friday 4th January 2013
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Looks like the management at Sony are determined to alienate their customers.

Apparently the consoles have been losing out badly to tablets and phones already.

The resale of games probably means they sell more new games than they otherwise would have done. People buy used games because they can't afford new ones. Looking in Game I wonder how many of the used titles are just discounted new ones.

Hoofy

79,375 posts

305 months

Saturday 5th January 2013
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wolves_wanderer said:
They had a "copy protection" on audio CDs that basically installed a rootkit on your PC.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sony_BMG_CD_copy_prot...

I fail to see the problem with selling games 2nd hand personally.
Ah yes, that was it.

Agreed re selling secondhand games. What next? VW forbids owners from selling its cars?

Mastodon2

14,164 posts

188 months

Saturday 5th January 2013
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CJ1987 said:
tbh i doubt this is true because sony havent confirmed it yet
Because they'd be so proud to shout about another shameless money grab right? Just like EA were so thrilled about the backlash to their online pass system?