Australian High Court rules PS2 mod chips are OK

By Randolph Ramsay on 06 October 2005

If you've got a mod-chipped PlayStation 2, then there's no reason to hide it away anymore. In a decision that could have far reaching consequences for Sony, the High Court of Australia has found it is legal to mod chip a PS2.

PlayStation game CDs come with a special access code that can only be read by the unit's boot ROM. This meant games bought from overseas or copied games couldn't be played on normal PS2s. But installing a modification chip circumvented the security measure, allowing gamers to be able to play games from overseas or copied titles.

The High Court today upheld an appeal by Sydney retailer Eddy Stevens, who has been involved in a four-year legal battle against Sony Computer Entertainment. Stevens was found in 2001 to have sold unauthorised copies of the games Croc 2, MediEvil, Motor Races World Tour and Porsche 2002, as well as having sold and installed mod chips to PS2 owners.

Sony argued that the mod chips were a breach of copyright under Australian law. But the Federal Court found in favour of Stevens in a 2002 decision which found that mod chips were not in breach of copyright because they did not circumvent measures Sony had put in place to prevent copying of their games. Simply put, while mod chips could allow you to play copied games or overseas titles, they did not actually make the copying of PS2 games possible.

Sony appealed to the full bench of the Federal Court, which found in its favour. Stevens then appealed to the High Court of Australia, which handed its decision firmly on the side of Stevens today.

Keep up to date with the latest games news, reviews and features by signing up to CNET.com.au's free Games Spotlight weekly newsletter. Sign up now!

Topics: australia, stevens, chip, court, legal, mod, ruling, ps2, chipped, mod-chip, high, 2, playstation, sony, game, illegal

Related Articles

Comments (4)

  • Sif commented on 27/02/2009 22:56 Report abuse

    Umm open your eyes and read, it was for PS2's!

  • Bourkie commented on 08/10/2008 11:48 Report abuse

    Umm, the court case was about PS1s not PS2s!

  • kelly commented on 11/04/2007 21:49 Report abuse

    Hi. I just read your artical about mop chip ps2 console and as it is ok to own one i was wondering if you could tell me where i could buy such a system for my son for his b,day Thanks Kelly

  • AzzaRulez commented on 29/03/2007 09:00 Report abuse

    Can You Give Away Free PS3's or PS2's

Post your own comment

Submit

Enter your personal information to the left, or sign in with your Facebook account by clicking the button below.

Connect

Must read