The latest PlayStation Portal update has supposedly addressed an exploit that allowed PlayStation Portable (PSP) games to be emulated natively on the streaming handheld.

This is according to a recent X / Twitter post by Andy Nguyen that was first spotted by VGC. An employee at Google, Nguyen previously claimedthat they were part of a small team that was able to get PSP games running offline on the PlayStation 5 peripheral via some hacking and the open-source emulator PPSSPP.

Now, however, Nguyen says that the exploit they used to get the software installed and running has been patched after they “responsibly reported the issues to PlayStation.” This alleged change comes as part of the latest PS Portal software update, version 2.0.6.

  • @narc0tic_bird@lemm.ee
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    953 months ago

    Yeah, let’s make sure all exploits are patched before the device inevitably becomes obsolete in a couple of years, so we can throw it away and buy the next version instead of not being wasteful.

    • haui
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      -313 months ago

      Hit the nail on the head. People who report jailbreaks are the same ones who reported their neighbors in soviet eastern germany.

        • haui
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          -283 months ago

          So what? Both are traitors to their fellow humans. Obviously, the outcome is different but I dont see why youre making a fuss about it.

            • haui
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              -263 months ago

              same for you. no reason to go ballistic. chill out.

              • @Vilian@lemmy.ca
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                103 months ago

                me? you compared bug reporting a “tablet” that has less utility that a tablet and weaker than a tablet with traitors of soviet union, anyone who wants to buy a device to play emulated games gonna buy a steam deck not that