Sony's PlayStation network has been shut down after cyber-attackers overloaded it in what's known as a distributed denial of service attack.
In
a Statement
made by Sony
said that no personal information had been accessed.
On
Sunday an American Airlines flight carrying a senior Sony executive was also
diverted following a bomb scare.
The
group claiming responsibility for closing down the network also tweeted
suggesting there was a security threat to the flight.
Meanwhile
"the PlayStation Network and Sony
Entertainment Network have been impacted by an attempt to overwhelm our network
with artificially high traffic".
"We
will continue to work towards fixing this issue and hope to have our services
up and running as soon as possible," the blog said.
Sony
has said the FBI is investigating the security scare over the flight carrying
Sony Online Entertainment President John Smedley, which should have landed in
San Diego but was diverted to Phoenix, Arizona.
Mr
Smedley tweeted, "Yes. My plane was diverted. Not going to discuss more
than that. Justice will find these guys."
Sony's
52 million strong PlayStation network has been hit by hacking attacks before,
including a security breach in 2011.
Sony
had already scheduled routine maintenance work to be done on its PlayStation
network on Monday.
After
1740 BST some services including PlayStation Store, PSN account management and
registration, entertainment services and online gameplay will be unavailable.
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