By now we all know that
Sony filed a lawsuit against Geohot and fail0verflow for their
distribution of PS3 jailbreak firmware and asked the court for a
temporary restraining order (TRO) to stop said distribution of the offending code. Well, according to Geohot, the court
denied declined to rule on Sony's motion earlier today. Geohot has reposted the code online, so it seems safe to say that the TRO is back for now, and the jailbreak can once again roam the internet unencumbered by any legal decrees. The decision, while favorable to the defendants, has little effect on the outcome of the litigation itself, so Hotz and company aren't out of the woods just yet. We'll keep you posted on the status of the order, and will also watch as the case progresses for the
real fireworks to start.
Update: Looks like we jumped the gun and got the story a little wrong, but thanks to our readers we've discovered that the judge declined to rule on the TRO. Instead she tabled the TRO issue because she was not satisfied that the Northern District of California has jurisdiction to rule on the matter because Geohot hacked the PS3 in New Jersey.
Geohot wins round one against Sony (kinda) -- judge declines to rule on SCEA restraining order (updated) originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 14 Jan 2011 20:49:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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CommentsSource: http://www.engadget.com/2011/01/14/geohot-wins-round-one-against-sony-we-think-sceas-restrainin/
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