DRM Ridiculousness Just A Part Of The PSP Go's Problems

from the how-unappealing-does-this-sound dept

A bunch of folks have been sending in various versions of the stories popping up all weekend about the disastrous PSP Go launch, with a product that seems designed to piss off as many consumers as possible. And, of course, one of the big problems? DRM. Apparently a promotion in Europe gave people free downloads of games — but if you have both a PS3 and a PSP and were used to downloading games to the PS3 to put on the PSP, you’re out of luck with the PSP Go. The games are locked to the platform where they were downloaded.

Sony, Sony, Sony. This is the same company that has been locking things down for years, and always regrets it. Way back in 2005, the company admitted that it needed to stop locking down content, and learn to open up more. The company got a lot of press for that statement… and kept locking stuff down. Earlier this year, Sony got a ton of press for basically saying the same thing about being more open. So what does it do? It goes and releases another device using locked down content. At some point you have to wonder who’s in charge at Sony.

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Companies: sony

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Comments on “DRM Ridiculousness Just A Part Of The PSP Go's Problems”

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27 Comments
slackr (profile) says:

I'm wary, are you?

A recent purchase of a high def tv my decision was swayed away from Sony, although of the 2 models I was considering I liked their picture better. In the end I decided that with streaming media becoming more commonplace that I did not want to be party to Sony’s continuing locking down of content. It may be early days in the country that I live (NZ) for streaming media, but Sony’s competition won my purchase on precisely this point. Once bitten, twice shy.

mcme (profile) says:

the apple of electronics

Sony has always been known for its quality and cool products, but this is one area that would do them good in the long run. I guess too much restrictive planning ahead might cost them bad. The could have gone to being ‘must have’s – but have stayed stumped at ‘good’ – bcos of such dumb decisions as you have stated. Times to come might not be as decent if they stick to their current mode of thinking – what with competition catching up and all.

Ima Fish (profile) says:

Sony’s problem is that it’s both a hardware company and a content company (Sony Pictures and Music). Thus it has a desire to make innovative and useful electronic devices for consumers. But then it also has the contradictory desire to lock them down to ensure that no one can actually use them in any meaningful way.

Sony has released updated Blu-ray, dvd, and audio discs that could not play in Sony’s own players. Does that make any sense? Not to a normal person. But the content industry has never been known for its normalcy.

Lucretious (profile) says:

Yes, please let me trade in my orginal PSP in which there is a huge homebrew community and hugely expanded functionality for this overpriced, locked up, flimsy little poo scraper.

usually there is SOME redeeming value when an upgraded game system comes out but there is not a single solitary thing about the PSP GO (perhaps maybe the compact design) that would make me buy it. There is no upside to this thing.

pjhenry1216 (profile) says:

Re: Re:

Honestly, I was considering purchasing one because it does have one advantage: you don’t have to carry around those big game discs. When you get even more than a handful of games, it starts becoming a pain carrying them around with you on trips if you’re not sure what you wanna play in the near future. However, my purchase was contingent on their “goodwill” program to allow the transfer of already purchased UMD games to the psp go… however, they’ve backed out of that one so they’ve lost me. Until I can transfer my UMD games to it and buy any game that’s available on the original PSP, I’m not buying one. And a decent price drop would be welcome as well. I mean come on, its not that much cheaper than the PS3 now.

Anonymous Coward says:

Sony sounds that family (there’s always one) at your kids’ school. You know, the one where the parents are at EVERY PTA meeting to show what good parents they are, but then they go home and as soon as they walk through the door, out comes the alcohol and the concern for their kids goes right out the window, leading to the kids becoming juvenile delinquents. And when the police bring them home, they’re SHOCKED that their kids could’ve been involved. Not THEIR kids – they’re GOOD kids. Right.

Mojo (user link) says:

Ima Fish hit the nail on the head – Sony is a hardware AND content company, so they are always screwing themselves with conflict of interest.

Sony was – and still is – HUGELY embarassed that APPLE and not SONY are the kings of the MP3 Walkman; Sony by all rights should have ruled that market, but they were too worried about wholeheartedly putting their weight behind a product that fostered the piracy of their content – so they essentially did nothing and watched Apple steal away the market they created.

How painful do you think it was for Sony to actually release iPod products? It must kill them.

But that’s what happens when you have a conflict of interest – nothing. Hemming and hawing and a whole lot of doing nothing while you decide what to do.

If they just made hardware, you can bet that the PSP GO would be an awesome product – but since they’re worried about their precious content being spread, they cripple it.

Come on, Sony – it’s not like you’d actually LOSE any money by being open – it just means that you might make $100 billion in profit as opposed to $105 billion. Is it worth pissing everyone off?

Why don’t you just TRY being “open” for a few years and see how it goes? Because you know how people react when you keep doing what you’re doing…

Cody Jackson (profile) says:

I've been boycotting Sony for 5 years

The last thing I recall buying with the Sony name on it was a PS2. (I don’t count Sony movies since they own so many different studios).

The last straw for me was MiniDiscs. I was a big user of MDs, with more than 80 discs in my collection. I used them to copy all of my CDs so I could sell the CDs; no since taking up space since I move so often.

I posted my encounter with Sony customer service to a forum after it happened. In a nutshell, my request was to open up their MDs to upload back to computers and use other operating systems; they considered it a tech support issue and kept sending me what was effectively a form letter saying my problem was a tech support issue.

That’s when I realized Sony doesn’t care about their customers, just the money. Then, they had the rootkit fiasco and the DRM-encumbered Blue-Ray tech and it just reinforced the fact that Sony doesn’t care about customer service.

There are too many other companies that want my money and make as good, if not better, items for me to bother with Sony.

Richard (profile) says:

PS3

Not a surprise – this is the company that locks up the Graphics hardware in the PS3 so you can’t use it without a hugely expensive developers contract.
The result – our PS3 lab is being sidelined after just a year (without the Graphics hardware the PS3 isn’t that much better than the PS 2 and is much harder to use.)

Don’t expect that there will be many programmers available to write PS3 games – since there’s nowhere to go to learn how!

Me says:

@Previous

360 in Europe and Japan are not very successful. In USA i know its the opposite, but the world is not just USA. If 360 wasn’t hackable they wouldn’t sell as much units here also …
PS3 Blueray also doesn’t mean a sh!t as sometimes many salesmen focus, most people i know with a PS3 never used Blueray and use HD media from other sources.

Also on electronics Sony has lost its charisma from the 90’s to be a normal company now. Today if you buy a Sony that doesn’t necessary means better …

PSP will die with next generation Iphones alike. I say …

inc (profile) says:

Sony needs to learn their DRM sucks. I had a mini-disc back in the day, before ipod, and it was awesome audio quality. You could fit lots of songs on small durable discs. You could also record digitally which was great for those making their own music. The DRM killed it though. Having to create AC3 file format, a crappy check in/check out system for those files, and no way to digitally download your self recorded music to your PC other then real time optical output. Ever since I could never buy into any Sony product no matter how good it sounds. They just end up hamstringing their products making them useless and letting the competition one up them.
So of course the iPod came out allowing MP3s without the need for discs and allowing you to upload the song to as many iPods as you own; this totally made the mini-disc a paper-weight. Now with the iPhone doing so much and even having decent games why would I carry another bulky device that requires discs and seems destine for the same fate?

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