You dropped $500 on a PS5. Sony decides what software runs on it. That arrangement just got challenged with real money. The FULU Foundation — a nonprofit co-founded by right-to-repair YouTuber Louis Rossmann and consumer advocate Kevin O’Reilly — has posted a $10,000 bounty for anyone who can bypass the PS5’s hypervisor on current firmware. Community donations have already pushed the pot to around $15,000, with FULU matching up to another $10K.
The timing isn’t accidental. Sony recently ended physical disc production for new PS5 games, and the cost of dedicated AI hardware keeps climbing. Your PS5 has a powerful GPU sitting locked behind Sony’s firmware — and that’s exactly what this bounty is targeting.
The Bounty Has Speedrun-Strict Rules
FULU demands a hypervisor bypass on current firmware — no legacy exploits, no bricked consoles.
Think of it like a speedrun with strict category rules. FULU published detailed requirements, and there’s no wiggle room:
- Must work on PS5 firmware 13.42 or newer (released July 1) — older exploits don’t qualify
- All PS5 variants eligible: original, Slim, and Pro
- Console must still boot into PS5 OS and play games normally after bypass
- Hardware mods allowed only if achievable with basic soldering skills
- Alternative OS doesn’t need full stability — just demonstrably boot and access CPU, RAM, and GPU
The framing is deliberate. This isn’t a piracy play. O’Reilly told Wired: “Gaming consoles have significant amounts of computing power… Why can’t I repurpose that? If I’m trying to vibe code or set up agentic AI systems, why can’t I use this box, this computer that I bought — that I own — to do what I want to do?”
Sony once agreed with that philosophy. The PS2 had an official Linux kit. Early PS3 models shipped with “OtherOS” support — until Sony killed it via update, sparking lawsuits. Security engineer Andy Nguyen’s ps5-linux project already runs Linux on older-firmware PS5s (firmware 4.51 and below), according to Tom’s Hardware. The catch: PS5s can’t be downgraded. FULU’s bounty targets exactly that gap.
The Legal Tightrope and the Symbolic Fight
DMCA Section 1201 makes this legally dangerous — and FULU designed the bounty structure accordingly.
Here’s where it gets interesting. Under DMCA Section 1201, bypassing technical protection measures carries civil and criminal penalties. FULU built an escape hatch: winners can claim the bounty privately without publishing the exploit publicly. A working PS5 jailbreak might exist and never reach the public. That sounds like a loss — but it’s partly the point. This is advocacy wearing a bounty hunter’s clothes.
The console now ships discless, runs a locked OS, and holds your game licenses the way a streaming service holds a library — subject to vanishing overnight. Rossmann is betting $10K that someone can crack that wall. Whether a public exploit ever materializes, the question Sony hasn’t answered remains uncomfortably simple: whose hardware is it, really?




























