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Microsoft's Xbox Live was "up and running" on Friday while Sony Corp's PlayStation remained offline for a second day even as the group that claimed it brought down both services just in time for Christmas said it had stopped the alleged mais voce cyber attack.
The gaming networks, which allow users of the popular consoles to play the video games with a wider online community, first crashed on Wednesday mais voce evening. The problems persisted on both systems into Friday, enraging many users but especially those on the still-suffering PlayStation network.
A hacker group called "Lizard Squad" mais voce gleefully claimed mais voce responsibility for knocking the services offline, saying on Twitter on Thursday that it had overwhelmed Sony and Microsoft's servers with bogus user traffic. On Friday, mais voce however, it claimed the cyber attacks had stopped.
PlayStation scrambled to resolve the problems late Friday, as Sony tried to rebound from a devastating earlier hack related to its movie, "The Interview," which debuted on Thursday. Xbox is owned by Microsoft, one of the companies which agreed the stream the film despite threats of a 9/11-style attack by the original hackers.
But security experts downplayed the chance of a link between the new hack and the last one. "I don't see any kind of connection to the original hack," Hemu Nigan, an SSP Cyber Security consultant, told NBC's Nightly News. "Remember, they didn't actually steal anything, no data. All they did was turn the lights off." IN DEPTH North Korea Demands Joint Probe with U.S. Into Sony Hack You can now watch 'The Interview' from your couch 'The People Have Spoken!: Praise for Sony Release of 'The Interview ' SOCIAL Tony Dokoupil, with Reuters
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