Sharpie scanning goof reveals major PlayStation budgets and revenues

Sharpie with magic sparks shooting out, on top of redacted Sony documents

Enlarge / Sharpies are great for many things—labeling leftovers, writing "bedroom" on packing boxes, ruining dry erase boards. They're not the best tool for sensitive documents submitted in a federal hearing. (credit: Aurich Lawson)

Most people know AAA games cost a lot to make, but they can also be cash cows if they're hits. Now, because Sharpies can fail to fully redact paper documents if you scan them, we can quantify some of Sony's PlayStation game budgets, earnings, headcounts, and other figures.

As reported by The Verge, the documents were supplied by Sony's CEO of PlayStation Jim Ryan. Ryan's submission is part of the ongoing FTC v. Microsoft hearing resulting from the Federal Trade Commission's attempt to block Microsoft's purchase of Activision Blizzard on antitrust grounds. By giving the FTC confidential numbers on AAA game performance, Sony aimed to show how Microsoft having Call of Duty as an exclusive franchise could hurt Sony (despite emails to the contrary).

But because of the interplay of paper, printer ink, Sharpie ink, and optical scanners, a lot more people, including journalists, can see those numbers. Some of the big ones are:

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Sharpie with magic sparks shooting out, on top of redacted Sony documents

Enlarge / Sharpies are great for many things—labeling leftovers, writing "bedroom" on packing boxes, ruining dry erase boards. They're not the best tool for sensitive documents submitted in a federal hearing. (credit: Aurich Lawson)

Most people know AAA games cost a lot to make, but they can also be cash cows if they're hits. Now, because Sharpies can fail to fully redact paper documents if you scan them, we can quantify some of Sony's PlayStation game budgets, earnings, headcounts, and other figures.

As reported by The Verge, the documents were supplied by Sony's CEO of PlayStation Jim Ryan. Ryan's submission is part of the ongoing FTC v. Microsoft hearing resulting from the Federal Trade Commission's attempt to block Microsoft's purchase of Activision Blizzard on antitrust grounds. By giving the FTC confidential numbers on AAA game performance, Sony aimed to show how Microsoft having Call of Duty as an exclusive franchise could hurt Sony (despite emails to the contrary).

But because of the interplay of paper, printer ink, Sharpie ink, and optical scanners, a lot more people, including journalists, can see those numbers. Some of the big ones are:

Read 2 remaining paragraphs | Comments


June 29, 2023 at 02:01AM

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