Sony Computer  Entertainment is under fire by PlayStation 3 owners. A class-action suit  has been brought against Sony  for removing Linux  support from PS3 consoles  in its latest upgrade.  
An attorney for PS3  owner Anthony Ventura filed the suit against Sony in U.S. District Court in San Francisco on  Wednesday after Sony removed support for Linux in its PlayStation 3.21 software  update. 
After Sony announced the update on March 28, unhappy PS3 owners took  their frustrations to the web by flooding Sony's official PlayStation  blog with angry comments. A total of 7,454 comments were posted as of  Thursday. While some are upset with losing Linux support, others are  more angry with Sony for removing a feature for which they paid.  
Ventura, however, took his frustrations straight to a lawyer who filed  the class-action suit on his behalf. 
No Joke 
PlayStation 3 owners were anticipating the PlayStation 3.21 upgrade  slated for April 1, but thought Sony was playing an April Fools' Day joke  when it said the upgrade would remove support for Linux.  
Sony quickly warned users that the upgrade was no a joke and, in fact,  was an attempt to protect the intellectual property of the content  offered on the PS3 system as well as to provide a more secure system.  PS3 owners who chose not to upgrade risked losing other PS3 features,  according to Sony, including access to the PlayStation Network, newer games, and  Blu-ray movies. Gamers who decided not to upgrade also risked losing  playback of copyright-protected videos stored on a media server, the  company warned. 
If Judge Edward Chen allows the class-action suit, it would include all  individuals who bought a PS3 between Nov. 17, 2006, and March 27, 2010,  according to reports. The suit does not specify any amount in requested  damages, but does state damages will not exceed $5 million.  
Julie Han, a spokesperson for Sony, said the company does not comment on  pending litigation. Rebecca Bedwell Coll, who is listed as Ventura's  lawyer, did not respond to requests for comment. 
Little To No Impact 
Sony Entertainment has had great success with its PS3, with 12 million  units sold in the U.S. to date, according to the company. Except,  however, for a few bumps in the legal road. 
In October 2009, Sony faced a class-action suit brought by John Kennedy,  who said a firmware update caused damage to thousands of PS3 systems.  After downloading the update, owners said it caused the system to  malfunction. The damage resulted in Kennedy having to cough up $150 in  repair fees. 
Analysts don't expect the new class-action to negatively impact Sony PS3 sales. "I doubt  it'll have much impact -- certainly a nuisance and cost, but having Linux on a PS3 was  always way down the list of priorities for most gamers," said Lewis  Ward, an IDC analyst.
Source: http://asurl.net/eOm
 
