look at where he's from
i kid i kid
Yep, English and proud.
Sadly console swaps are common place in the UK too. Either way its fraud and a shitty thing to do regardless of where you are from.
look at where he's from
i kid i kid
Most stores in the US will accept returns with no questions asked. So you can just return it if you happen to purchase a banned system. Hint: Even if it was your fault, you could still return it.I love that I don't live in the US.
Didn't you post in other threads that all you need to do to avoid a ban was to switch sd cards?ets say I get banned. Can I replace my switch's cert for another one to bypass said ban?
If so, how?
If not, why?
Thanks
Dumb dumbDidn't you post in other threads that all you need to do to avoid a ban was to switch sd cards?
I hope your not thinking of trying to take someone eleses cert. As others have said ofw will not accept the new cert and loading a cfw to insert it will just get it baned for the same reasons the first one was
Sue the store for selling damaged units
I've explained this before in a similar thread. Retail stores don't just throw returned product on the shelves. Electronics especially usually just get thrown into a bin and returned to the manufacturer to be refurbed regardless of whether it has apparent damage or not. Unless of course it's GameStop, in which case the consumer assumes the dangers of purchasing a second-hand console. Though I've dealt with a similar scenario with GameStop, and they quickly replaced the console.how would the store know that its banned? do you think bro?
InterestingIt is possible, certain developers know how to do it, but no one will ethically release. The main reason for this is fraud. Not only from used switches, but console cert / private info theft from malicious homebrew since no CFW currently block bis* calls. I brought up blocking these functions because only one application has a legit use for them: raj's sys firmware installer but developers dont want to lose access to powerful functions to the detriment of user security.
This is the same reason why the similar method for the 3DS hasn't been released. What's funny, though, is that it's literally two lines of code. Obtaining an unbanned console, hacking it, and dumping all the necessary data is the tedious part.It is possible, certain developers know how to do it, but no one will ethically release. The main reason for this is fraud. Not only from used switches, but console cert / private info theft from malicious homebrew since no CFW currently block bis* calls. I brought up blocking these functions because only one application has a legit use for them: raj's sys firmware installer but developers dont want to lose access to powerful functions to the detriment of user security.
This is the same reason why the similar method for the 3DS hasn't been released. What's funny, though, is that it's literally two lines of code. Obtaining an unbanned console, hacking it, and dumping all the necessary data is the tedious part.
I'm talking about in the case with the 3DS. It is indeed only two lines of code. Also, the necessary information is public. It's documented on the Brew Wikis. People just won't spend the time to read through everything to figure it out.It is a lot more than two lines of code. It is not as simple as just copying someone else's certain file.
You shouldn't continue this conversation, even having it discloses information on how to do it.
Scum or not thats a good idea
Then you can't replase cert, unless you also emulated the info about your console.
I've explained this before in a similar thread. Retail stores don't just throw returned product on the shelves. Electronics especially usually just get thrown into a bin and returned to the manufacturer to be refurbed regardless of whether it has apparent damage or not. Unless of course it's GameStop, in which case the consumer assumes the dangers of purchasing a second-hand console. Though I've dealt with a similar scenario with GameStop, and they quickly replaced the console.