StarROMs Co-Founder Talks Legal ROMs
CaptMondo writes "If you love the old quarter-sucking arcade games of the past and want to be able to download and play the ROMs for them legally, StarROMs (as mentioned previously here on /.), has stepped in and made this possible. PerformancePCCanada has an interview with StarROMs co-founder Frank Leibly, discussing how they convinced Atari to make purchasing ROMs legal for their long-time game fans, but still making it worth StarROMs' while." The interview also notes StarROMs will be "...increasing our offering of classic arcade games, and... expanding into console titles, starting out with the classic Atari console games."
If you buy a starrom, or 10, can you then legally set up a mame machine that plays 10 classic games and charge a dime per play?
that some of these titles would be allowed to die off. i'm glad someone has made the coin-op people see the light. too bad there isn't a copyright sunset thats more realistic for software.
No ET?
Because its not legal, and atari or other game maker doesn't get any cut for their initial work.
I'd been looking for 1 rom which NOBODY EVER has, ever heard of "laser ghost". You have a laser gun, it's a shoot-em-up like "operation wolf" or "terminator".
If this site can gather up some extremely rare roms, I'd be more than happy to shell out $$$. Until then, it's just selling old pacman and galaga.
If you do get caught with illegal roms your case is much better if you can say "Look, I tried to buy these, but they wouldn't let me. See, I bought all the star roms titles." You are still in legal trouble, but the judge and jury will look on you more favorably. In fact they might even dismiss the case because if the company was really interesting in their property they would still be selling it. Okay, that last is a big stretch. You are still better off being legal as much as you can though.
get a cut? the roms themselves are free, you are paying for the media / shipping expenses... :) read more on freemameroms.com, there is no profit, so no cut, just plain free roms, :)
;)
-scribe i should really create an acct
If you really want to be technical, the letter of the law (here in the US) states that copyright violation must be demonstrated as being A) Commercially damaging to the fair market value of the property in question AND B) Not for archival, research, or educational purposes.
This basically means that regardless of what a company claims, if the game has no fair market value (IE, is not reasonably available on the commercial market), or if you are archiving, researching, or educating with video games, you're in the clear.
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sorry George...
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