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Inishowen gamers fear identity fraud 09.05.11

by Rebecca Rathbone and Caoimhinn Barr

INISHOWEN gamers were left twiddling their thumbs for a third straight week as the Sony PlayStation Network remained offline following an attack by hackers.
Sony has revealed that a further 25 million users worldwide may have had their credit card details stolen. That announcement comes after last week’s revelation that 77 milllion gamers were compromised following data theft.
Sony confirmed that names, addresses, emails, birthdates, phone numbers and other information from millions of games accounts may have been stolen from its servers.
Inishowen gamers Peter Deeney and Ben Barber.
PlayStation Network user Peter Deeney from Buncrana, is one of many concerned locals affected by the recent Sony security breach.
"I think it isn't right that they now have all of my personal details, and I fear what the people behind this could do with my card details after this all dies down. For this reason I will have to change a lot of my passwords and account information,” he said.
Another Inishowen gamer, Ben Barber, who often clashes with friend Peter during online ‘Call of Duty’ sessions, was remaining upbeat earlier this week.
"Even though the network was down over the Easter holidays I haven't missed it as much as I might have because of the great weather!” he added.
Thousands of gamers in the North West are keeping their fingers crossed that the PlayStation Network will be operational soon after the longest break to the service in more than four years.
Sony denied on its official PlayStation blog that hackers had tried to sell it a list of millions of credit card numbers.
Executives of the Japanese company apologised and said that it would gradually restart the PlayStation Network with increased security and would offer some free content to users.
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