Hmmm, wonder what brought this on ? Sony’s gone and altered the lingo in its PSN user agreement to require binding arbitration to settle any future disputes — making it much harder for disgruntled customers to get their day in court. Desire to keep your right to sue? You may opt out of the arbitration requirement by sending a letter to Sony’s lawyers saying you will be keeping your courtroom entry card, thanks greatly. Additionally, the change won’t affect class-action litigation started by August 20th of this year. Which means people whose privacy was compromised within the great PSN outage of 2011 that already filed suit needn’t be anxious. For the remainder of you, we’d advise breaking out the pen and paper ASAP in case you wanna keep the halls of justice open for future complaints.
Everything Everywhere promises ‘small-scale LTE launch’ in UK by the top of 2012
ASUS MWC teaser video hints at possible hi-res tablet display?



