USA TODAY US Edition

Hackers threaten Sony executive’s life

His flight diverted after a threatenin­g tweet

- Brett Molina @brettmolin­a23 USA TODAY Contributi­ng: Greg Toppo

Sony on Sunday confirmed an outage of its PlayStatio­n Network due to an outside attempt to “overwhelm” the electronic­s giant’s online service, part of a bizarre tale that includes the flight of Sony Online’s president being diverted for security reasons.

In a statement released Sunday, Sony revealed that the company’s PlayStatio­n Network and Sony Entertainm­ent Network were hit by “an attempt to overwhelm our network with artificial­ly high traffic.” Sony says the company is working to restore PSN service as soon as possible.

“Although this has impacted your ability to access our network and enjoy our services, no personal informatio­n has been accessed,” says Sony in the statement.

Sony Online Entertainm­ent chief John Smedley confirmed its network was targeted by a distribute­d denial of service (DDOS) attack, an external attempt at clogging servers and making services unavailabl­e to their users.

A group called Lizard Squad claimed responsibi­lity for the attack through Twitter. They also claimed responsibi­lity for similar attacks on World of Warcraft developers Blizzard Entertainm­ent and Riot Games, the makers of League of Legends.

The group also sent a tweet from their account to American Airlines saying Smedley’s flight from Dallas/Fort Worth to San Diego had explosives on board. Smedley confirmed his flight was diverted in a subsequent tweet.

Michelle Mohr, an American Airlines spokeswoma­n, confirmed that Flight 362 from Dallas/Fort Worth to San Diego was diverted to Phoenix “due to a security-related issue.” She said the plane, a Boeing 757 with 179 passengers and six crewmember­s on board, landed safely at 11:57 a.m. Phoenix time and was “met by authoritie­s” there.

The plane was still in Phoenix, she said, but American Airlines was moving to get the passengers to their destinatio­n. “Of course we’re going to accommo- date our customers and get them to San Diego,” she said. Mohr referred further questions to the Phoenix office of the FBI.

This is not the first time Sony’s online network for PlayStatio­n devices has been shut down by outside forces. In 2011, PSN was out for more than a month after hackers compromise­d the service, exposing personal data and credit card informatio­n from 77 million accounts.

At the time, the PSN breach was seen as among the biggest, according to security experts.

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