In case you've been living under a rock for the last week (or in case you've been paying attention to more important issues like the tornadoes that have devastated parts of the United States or Obama having to admit he's American), the Playstation Network (or the PSN, the network which allows people to use their Playstation 3 consoles on line) went down (and is still down for what has now been over a week.)

So, needless to say, some people were pissed. Much like you would be if you didn't have a PS3 and your cable went down or your internet was gone for a day or two. I mean, people can't even use their Netflix if all they have is a PS3. It's basically an apocalypse.

Sony/Playstation decided to handle it in a different way, though, and blamed the Digital Hacker Supergroup "Anonymous" for the whole debaucle... or at least they tried to. After internet rumors and some Sony "hints" at Anonymous being responsible for the Playstation Network going down spread wide, members of Anonymous (who will remain anonymous) issued the following statement:

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Sooo, that kind of ruined Sony/Playstation's credibility there... but then it got worse:

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And then the sh*tstorm truly began. Sony's customers are not only pissed, but rightfully worried and apprehensive about continuing to associate their credit card information with the company at all which, of course, has led to many a passive-aggressive, or outwardly aggressive, meme-oriented, video and Photoshop responses.

Even though Sony said "The entire credit card table was encrypted and we have no evidence that credit card data was taken" this Thursday in order to try and calm the outward (and deserved) rage over how poorly protected such important information was, the words "we have no evidence that credit card data was taken" is kind of like saying this:





So, here are the thirty funniest examples of exactly how the internet reacted to the whole debacle.