Nintendo shuts down www.snes9x.com
Alex W. Jackson writes "According to this email by Jerremy Koot of the SNES9x project, www.snes9x.com's server has pulled the plug after receiving an email from Nintendo to the effect that "Emulators are illegal." The email from Nintendo was not made available, but it apparently makes references to this so-called Legal FAQ. Someone with a legal background wanna take a stab at poking some holes in this thing?
"
Perhaps call for widespread mirroring of this site? See if they can keep it up...
N.
In that stupid FAQ they first said it was illegal for you to download a copy of a game you owned, that you had to make the copy yourself. Then they went on to say things like Dr. V64 are illegal... How am I supposed to make my own copy which I am entitled to, if the copier is illegal? I also want to know how Nintendo feels all of this is illegal if those 2 PSX emu's (i forget the names) have gotta through the courts (to a point) in their legallity.
Talk about bringing on the big FUD!
Example:
"Does Nintendo Believe the UltraHLE Violates its Intellectual Property Rights?
Yes"
Well they can believe anything they want, but they hafe to prove it too.
The feeling I get when reading this legal mumbo-jumbo, is that this so-called FAQ is only to intimitade potential emulator user/writer.
They hint that the emulators could possible cost thousands of jobs.
"Such emulators have the potential to significantly damage a worldwide entertainment software industry which generates over $15 billion annually, and tens of thousands of jobs."
As if Nintendo would hesitate to close down some poor Malasyan sweatshop, if they could possible gain a few dollars for them.
That does it, I have no pity for greedy, intimidating corporations, we have seen lot of them. I will be boycotting Nintendo products, and use every chance to persuase my friends, famliy and co-workers to do the same. And I will tell Nintendo about it. They even left a email address for me (noalegal@noa.nintendo.com/nintendo@nintendo.com) to write to. Sony, here I come! (Although I doubt that Sony is any better!)
Jón tired-of-greedy-corps Ragnarsson
We'd like to see the email that NOA sent to the ISP. C'mon. Show us. Are you too afraid or what?
> Haven't the Copyrights for Old Games Expired? > U.S. copyright laws state that copyrights owned > by corporations are valid for 75 years from the > date of first publication. Because video games > have been around for less than three decades, > the copyrights of all video games will not > expire for many decades to come. 75 YEARS?? Books written by individuals only get 50 after the death of the last surviving writer! Anyway, I think we should E-MAIL, Mail, and Petition congress until they ACKNOWLEDGE that Video Games are a more Tidal medium and because they change so much and so fast, this should be shortened to say 5 years for Video Games. Computer Games may also be placed under this, but we may want to increase the number for Computer Games since you can still play really old games like Maniac Mansion without having an old computer.
1. I never said "We believe" was anything other then their opinion. Not legal fact. Not able to stand in court, etc. But I'm sick of people hear twisting their words around.
2. When you say that you will resist going into reverse engineering practices and the like, you're admitting that you use RE to "figure out" the Nintendo consoles. This means you're not creating an emulator in a clean room, and the emulator would be illegal.
There is a major problem here that everyone seems to be forgetting when comparing Nintendo to Sony and the like. Nintendo uses cartridges, not CD's. So what if someone does come out with a clean-room emulator for N64? How many people could legitimately buy and use it? These people would need to have their own ROM extractor, and they would have to own the game cartridge. Any other use of an emulator would be illegal, because it is illegal to distribute a copyrighted work without the permission of the author or owner, Nintendo.
Should the person who sells you a piece of land be rosponsible for a murder that happens on that piece of land? I don't think so!
Unless of course they had known it was haunted, that the people would become insane and kill each other and used this as a scheme to make money because the title deed could be taken away from a house if the people in were dead especially by their own acts...
The ship sank. Get over it. (This sig was cut out from another's shirt and painstakingly hand-posted)
We had an experience that is relevant here, Some of our older staff are hooked on a text editor called PE which was written on stone tablets by IBM. They were able to make a business case for it based on it's column editing abilities. The problem was that we were unable to buy it anywere, including from IBM. We then discovered that under Australian copyright law, if the publisher won't sell you a work, you may make copies of it. Hey presto problem solved. Has anyone actually tried to purchase old games from nintendo?
"We believe..." is just a way Nintendo tries to jump through legal loopholes. "We believe..." I like saying "This is the way it is from our viewpoint, but we don't know enough of the law to say that this is how the world works." :). If Nintendo wants to have a part of the American market, it must be willing to co-exist with products that perform or even outperform the same functions.
I'll resist going into reverse engineering practices and the like. However, I will say that Nintendo game consoles are fairly simple to figure out
Patents and intellectual.. lets be more specific and disclose prior art, over and above, say Atari. As for anti copy - I am sure the dongle people may say they were first. Building a dongle into a game hardly seems innovative.
As for the copyright, Certain countries PERMIT copying after all alternatives have failed, book out of print, no copies in National library etc. Guess this may have limited application for out of print software.
Then there is the question of medium. I I record my (owned) records onto CD's as a preservation measure, then listen to them, I see little wrong.
Or swapping my diamond stylus with a frictionless stylus that never causes record wear.
Now does running windows software on a MAC piracy? I think not. As long as I own the original, all is fair and above board.
I'd like to side with N, but I really think the law will have to be changed for them first, because like MP3, chasing the web posters is next to impossible.
Recognising the impossible (not much money in prosecuting school kids, the other angle verges on FUD blustering.
If they were smart, they would release an emulation version, say limited to 50 uses, then needs to connect to mother for important bug fixes, and secret CPUID exchange, and a toll free number for 'assistance'
The right thing would be to redesign/improve/republish all their games, with build in expiry/self destruct sequences.
Lastly consider MP3. Dollars to Sheckels that the record companies have something much better, and are sitting on it. If you can't meet competition head on, then get out of the kitchen.
It is a piece of programming that happens to interface correctly with SNES roms to produce an exact copy of the game. Since they programmed snes9x by themselves, in all truth it is their property and not illegal. Simply because it does the exact same thing as a console does not mean that it is illegal. Since one could make a rom from scratch, run it through this program, and have it work, that means that its only use is not for snes rom's. In other words, their ISP kicked them off for no good reason. I wonder if they have jurisdiction to do that.
"If the damm game makers would port to Linux they woudl not have this problem, and they would make more money."
Your statement is totally illogical. Why should a game maker invest MILLIONS of dollars in research and development on a game, and then release it for free? How would they pay their bills? I defy you to explain this.
If you want to really confuse things, then
try to answer the question 'what isn't emulation?'
All your pentiums etc. emulate the x86
architecure -- they don't do it natively
(the PII doesn't execute x86 instructions
internally, and doesn't even have the same
registers as the 'x86' chip that it emulates'
All MIPS chips emulate the MIPS architecture.
The architecture is an abstract definition, not
a piece of silicon...
A Nintendo 64, at software level, emulates the
N64 software architecture (which, agaain, is an
abstract theoretical thing)
You need (have) to use patents to protect the
architecture, since copyright of one
implementation of the architecture doesn't
extend to all possible implementations.
Here's what's at the botom of the 'legal faq':
How Do I Report Sites that are Offering Illegal Software or Other Illegal Video Game Products?
Please either call and report that information to Nintendo of America Inc. at 1-800-633-3236 or e-mail us at noalegal@noa.nintendo.com.
please note the 1-800-633-3236... Yup, a toll free way to complain, and make your opinion heard. Whee
------------------
Yeah...that's right! By golly ...the fact that you found that .1% of ROMS out there are legal totally invalidates this whole thing.
Silly Nintendo...what were they thinking? People who use these ROMS *always* have purchased a legal copy. Yesirree...nothing illegal going on here.
same scenario with the playstation consoles
the old companies such as nintendo, who still uses technology such as cartridges, despite CDs and DVDs clearly being much more practical and having much larger capacities, think they can continue to practice this negligence of time. If they don't keep up with the times, they will be left behind. (Microsoft come to mind?) It may take time to get through to people, but once something is known, it cannot be stopped. Things like Linux and Copyleft are gradually becoming more popular. But, i'm afraid this dance between companies will continue, but eventually a superior standard will emerge, only to be toppled and another standard emerge... it is an endless circle, until we all die. But i've never owned a console, and never plan to. I was introduced early to computers with my first 486/33, and have since remained loyal to them. I shun any console system with their limted abilities, barely comparable to that of a PC. Some argue the price, but eventually they will become even, as console gamers demand the features of a PC (ex. PSX2 has a modem). So, forgive my rambling, as i must be off.
TwistedGreen
I don't know what everybody's getting in such a tizz about. I guess everyone's overly yankeecentric, but I'd just like to point out the benefits of living in a country that *didn't* start a war with their colonial ancestors, and just sort of nudged them out of the way.
:) ), could be reproduced in its' entirety, for the purposes of critical analysis. Since the guys at SNES9X have never sought to make a profti from SNES9X (and all other incarnations), it'd be an easy job to shift the whole site to Australia, and watch Nintendo try and reach them.
S21(A) of the Australian Copyright Act states
SECT. A fair dealing with a literary, dramatic, musical or artistic work, or with an adaptation of a literary, dramatic or musical work, does not constitute an infringement of the copyright in the
work if it is for the purpose of criticism or review, whether of that work or of another work, and a sufficient acknowledgement of the work is made.
In short, any copywrighted work (including.. say... a Sony BIOS
If Nintendo are particularly ambitious, newly created domains such as Norfolk Island and the Cayman Islands have almost non existent copyright legislation, and the site could be hosted there, immune from prosecution.. If the SNES9X guys feel uncomfortable about their involvement, they could allow someone else to register the domain, maintain the site.. whatever.
International Copyright you say? IT'S ENTIRELY NON ENFORCEABLE!!
International Copyright relies upon the Political will of the Sovereign Nation State in which the copyright is being infringed, I think our friends in the Caymans have better things to do than chase after a bunch of rebel programmers.
The SNES9X crew (well, after we forgave you for the frame skipping "bug" *ahem*) are one of the more respected on the Emu scene, it'd be a shame to see all their hard work dissapear into the ether.
Well, that's my 2c
No, definately not nope, not at all.
Well, it is correct that Their s/ware is 'ip' but you could take a backup here
A reverse engineered emu wouldn't be illegal though, not in the slightest, it sure as hell wouldn't be Nintedos 'ip', it'd be the programmers 'ip' - stick that in your pipe and smoke it NES......
I already sent my boycott notice to them.
I suggest everyone does that, with only a fraction of the slashdot community a point could be clearly made to them. Namely, that their customers will not accept this kind of behaviour.
I think their general questions email adress is sufficient for delivering this opinion unto them:
nintendo@nintendo.com
yes, but emulation doesn't deal about code copying, when you do a emulator you don't copy any source code.
Such a vague term as "quality" is just an excuse for sony/nintendo to keep an iron fist on the market.
Look at PC software as an example. There is not one iota of central control but, gosh, some how it seems to struggle along.....
Both Sony and Nintendo now have made attempts to stop emulation of their hardware, but I dont think they realise the benefits. Amiga has supported emulation of its products for some time now, even including their OS as a part of the emulation package. For the many peoplpe who can not find Amiga hardware/OS or have never tried it they allow those people to use the system. I think Amiga has got it right. And for those people who say its the emulations fault for pirating, its more the software companys fault for not protecting their software.
Posted by Amun-Ra:
I am not a lawer but I was under the impression that due to the speed at which hardware became obsolete, software passed into the public domain after 2 years, allowing anyone to do whatever they liked to the software as long as credit was given to the original author, including passing on. This would mean that emulators for the super nintendo would be legal as it is intended to run public domained software, and has not been created for non profit.
"So why shouldn't they want to close down the site? If someone ran a website telling how to break into my house, I would want it closed down"
But you would NOT and should NOT be able to, at least if 'someone' was US cit. Things like what you want to do and what N did should be prevented by the 1st amemdment to the U.S. constitution, read it its good fiction.
Unfortunatly, individuals rights have been eroded and 'big interests' rights have greatly expanded.
Actually they have little rights but 'everything' goes thier way by default and few can afford to fight them in the only legal forum, the courts.
Sure, the reason people write emulators could be to figure out how their processors work, or just to see if they can, or just because they're there, or any of a dozen other reasons that have nothing to do with playing pirated games.
But I would hazard to guess that at least 90%, and probably closer to 99%, of the people who download them do so because they want to play pirated games. Take me, for example--I'm not a programmer; I don't even own a Nintendo, much less the necessary hardware to make ROM copies--what else could I do with them?
While I do like emulators, and support having them freely available, I have to be honest and admit that the ground on which I do so is legally, if not morally, shaky. I can definitely understand the company's point of view.
Editor Emeritus and Senior Writer, TeleRead.org
First: Which idiot actually wrote to Nintendo and asked these questions? All of these questions seem to have been written by the same person who answered them.
Second: It seems that all these questions were prepared by someone who seems to have trouble accepting the fact that they don't write the law and are not the legal interpreters of such. The law of Nintendo is not applicable anywhere outside of Nintendo's walls. If they're allowed to dictate new laws, I dictate that Day is Night, that Night does not exist, and that everyone in the world should move to another continent every day, and that it is perfectly legal to pirate video games ONLY if they are from Nintendo.
Third: Regarding the question "Isn't it Okay to Download ROMs for games that are no longer distributed in stores or commercially exploited? Aren't they considered public domain?", The author is right, they aren't, however they definitely should be. Preserving copyright on any works that aren't used is stupid and merely a support for the Walt Disney Company to re-release Bambi 300,000 times at little cost for big profit before it's copyright expires (IF it expires, at the rate the #@$@ congress keeps increasing the terms of copyright).
Fourth: This guy certainly cannot get away with "Does Nintendo Believe the UltraHLE Violates its Intellectual Property Rights? Yes." Despite the fact that it's a yes-or-no question, it definitely needs some proper defense provided. I think that they should either shut up or provide some detailed information on WHY they claim it's illegal. Also on the claim that it "circumvents Nintendo's anti-piracy security system", if that truly is patented, it would be illegal for UltraHLE to implement it in the first place. There is a signifigant difference between "circumventing" and "not implementing" that Nintendo is clearly blind to.
Fifth: ColecoVision's 2600 Emulator.
Sixth: The statement that "The only purpose of video game emulators are to play illegal copied games from the Internet." is very short-sighted. These tools can be used for many reasons, such as helping a legitamite developer port their game to a platform they know little about without an enormous amount of study.
Seventh: Sony Corporation of America is incredibly stupid for blocking Virtual Game Station - It does open up new revenue streams for Sony and Connectix actually took a great deal of time to add anti-piracy code to their software. Is that really encouraging piracy?
Nintendo's FAQ says:
Are all ROMS on the Internet Illegal?
Yes. All ROMs available on the Internet are unauthorized and infringing copies of copyrighted works
That's incorrect. I have several legal ROMs, such as the pong demo written for the n64, and several original n64 and snes games available either as freeware or public domain software. These ROMs are not illegal.
10 PRINT CHR$(205.5+RND(1)); : GOTO 10
There's a bit of a difference between PlayStation emulators like Bleem! and things like UltraHLE and Snes9x. PlayStation emulators are very easy to use with original game CDs, since any PC capable of running the emulator probably has a CD-ROM drive as well. AFAIK, the same is not true for cartridge ROMs. Sure, you can use a game copier to copy a cartridge onto your PC and then run it through the emulator, but it seems like there's no real cost-cutting there. (I may be wrong -- I don't know how much the copiers cost.)
End result: Nintendo's right that you can't really use NES emulators for much more than playing pirated ROMs. It's not the same situation as with the CD-based consoles.
The core game will usually take only so much space from a CD or a DVD. The rest typically consists of soundtracks and pre-rendered animation, which can in many cases be discarded without affecting the actual gameplay. As in the PC warez scene it is the common practice to rip these extras away to keep the release small, I see no reason why pirates would not (eventually) apply this technique to console games as well.
Remember the Game Genie? Remember all the crap that Nintendo did to block it? Remember how nintendo got laughed out of court?
if Gary, Jeremy, and Telekawaru (of Snes9x) learn of this, tehy can get a MAJOR lawsuit out of this one. Hell, the ACLU would love to have a case like this, just to put their name in the headlines.
Gauntlet vs Gnome Hack.
Diablo owes its existence to Rogue type games.
As I said before any fool with some discipline can make a game. The emulators cut costs on development (if I have a game developed for an emulator I can be reasonably sure my ROM can written to a cartridge) just as mp3s and CD-Burners and the Internet cut distribution, recording, and advertising costs.
As for emulation... Hello I've seen a ton of demos of games that came out precisely for the emulators.
The ship sank. Get over it. (This sig was cut out from another's shirt and painstakingly hand-posted)
1. Any RIAA lawyer.
2. Bill gates.
3. Any Nintendo lawyer.
4. Any RIAA lawyer.
"Rock stars also let you tape to a DAT! Get a grip."
Let you tape WHAT to a DAT? A live concert? A CD you already own? You're comparing apples to oranges. Why should you be able to download a game for free that Nintendo licenses or has created, and means to sell in the stores? Just because you don't have the money, or don't feel like paying for it doesn't make it right or legal.
Let's not confuse being righteous with being illegal.
As for your last paragraph, you seem to be hinting that people use Emulators to play games written by people outside of the console business... people like you and me. It sounds like you need to get real. How many of these types of games do you play (or have you ever seen)? People download emulators to play games copied from cartridges... usually ones they don't own.
As far as I can tell from the current UK and EU case law, there is no way Nintendo could win that case. I'd love to see their lawyers trying to come anything legally viable in that crap.
I'm not sure if this is what you were referring to, but Amstrad released a 386/Mega Drive machine a few years back...it was a decent spec box for the time; only problem was, due to the proprietary nature of the machine there was practically no upgrade options whatsoever...
I would love to see Nintendo try to make a legal case that would stand up in a court of law procing that ROM copies were illegal. When you pay 60-70$ for a cartidge you're paying for royalties, licencing, the media itself, and a single copy of the software. But you can backup the software onto a different form of media legally. The law nowhere states where you have to store that archival copy. If you happen to store it on a remote server which happens to have FTP or HTTP access and someone downloads your archived file that is not illegal. If you intentionally sold a copy of the software to someone that would be illegal. If Nintendo's ROMs had a form of encryption that allowed the media ONLY to be read by an N64 yet you cracked the encryption and archived the ROM it still would not be illegal because Nintendo doesnt own the patent on the encryption. Why is Mario mad? Because he didn't get a big fat license fee for the download of a ROM. Nintendo also cannot say that an emulator is illegal because it uses their bytecode. They use old R4000 MIPS chips as their main processors. The R4000 is made by our friends at SGI (with the new crappy logo). They also dont own the actual ROM manufacturing process or the semiconductor memory inside their machines. Nintendo is only a licensing and development company. Their patents are on SOFTWARE not hardware. If you managed to hex edit one of their binaries that they fully owned the right to they MIGHT be able to take legal action, but copying a ROM and making a bytecode emulation program is NOT illegal.
I'm a loner Dottie, a Rebel.
Such emulators have the potential to significantly damage a worldwide entertainment software industry
... and missing.
Don't they mean that "such emulators have the potential to take away from our bottom line"? The emulators are part of this "worldwide entertainment software industry" and only help provide a means to expand it.
---------------------------------------
The art of flying is throwing yourself at the ground...
I think Nintendo has already done a good enough job of that... Sheesh...
Connectix Virtual Game Station, a PSX emulator for Mac. So this is some legal precedence, Sony was unable to stop the shipping. I don't know what the deal is now w/ it. Some of the reaoning behind that I think though is that you still need a copy of a legit PSX CD to play, while N64 is a little different because current emulators require one ot copy the rom into an image on the computer. Connectix's product though was the first real commercial emulator by a fairly popular company (from their Virtual PC product), so that w/ UltraHLE brought a lot of attention to emulation.
Anybody got the real details on the outcome of Sony vs. Connectix?
Although NOA could not win a suit against him, he certantly has a strong case against them.
There is *NO* legal presidence that 'emulators are illegial' and according to US law, ISPs are common carriers (if reged with the FCC) and are imune to illegial use by their coustomers). Emulators certantly do have legimate uses, NOA is full of it..
It's rather ammusing.. If my local law enforcement wanted to go after this guy for something, they would be powerless (because he's in another country), but if NOA flexes some power they could probably ruin this guy's life.
.
"The right to pursue happiness in not granted in the Constitution; it is stated in the Declaration of Independence..."
My faux paus... but my point does not change.
I am not arguing about copyright law, or whether it's right or wrong. I'm talking about companies that own copyrights to games, and those games are being illegaly copied and distributed. This hurts the companies, and the programmers that wrote the games. Yet these same people who are chanting that they want to have the freedom to do this are infringing on another person's freedom to make money from their hard work.
True, those demo ROMs are legal, I assume, because their authors never placed a copyright on them. However, in the case of commercial ROMs, which I assume Nintendo meant when they stated "ROMs", they aren't because they are protected under current copyright laws. You might make an argument that ROMs of games no longer sold in stores, besides second-hand games, should be released as freeware, however, Nintendo IS still profitting from this service they have set up in convenience stores in Japan which allows people to download ROM images onto a RAM-type cartridge for a fee. They aren't planning to bring this to the US but they can't make an exception for the US market just because of that (they wouldn't want to be seen as promoting double standards, would they?).
Words have meaning not because of what the dictionary assigns them, but because of what the people agree on their meaning. People can use words in different ways which don't necessarily have to have a dictionary meaning (what do you think creative writers do), and dictionaries try to contain all possible uses of a word which they can't. Why the digression? Well, the previous poster's point I believe is that the word "pirate" in many people's minds brings up images of a guy w/ an eye patch and a sword that robs ships.
The big "N" should go ask Atari about how they just won lots of good PR...
Email noalegal@noa.nintendo.com and let them know what you think of this.
While you're at it, you might want to point out the inaccuracies in their legal FAQ.
10 PRINT CHR$(205.5+RND(1)); : GOTO 10
Nintendo has good reasoning behind why they did it. Then again, maybe not. The only way I can see emulators as illegal is if they infringe upon the copyright holder.
That is, "SNES9x, a fully fledged Super Nintendo Entertainment System" without permission from Nintendo to use their name or even a blurb about "SNES(tm) is a respective trademark of Nintendo..."
What if you shelled out 50 bucks back in the day for Super Punchout! and your dog knocked over a 40 of Mickey's into your SNES cartridge collection and ruined them all? Does this mean you should never play those games again? Even though you shelled out, say, 10 x $50 = $500 for those games? That's bullshit. Same applies for people getting on my back for copying my CDs. I have my entire 250+ CD collection stored as mp3s on my computer. Every single song. If I can't play or rip a song from a CD, I download it. I'm not going to spend another 12 bucks for a CD I already own...
So essentially Nintendo is saying that if you never played a vintage game and don't know a friend who has the original system, you're screwed.
Sorry, but that doesn't jive with me. I LOVE classic games, yet I don't have the time nor energy to search through every rummage/garage sale finding these classic beauties. And Nintendo DOESN'T EVEN MAKE THEM ANYMORE. So I'm just supposed to forget about those games and should be led to believe that they no longer exist? Yeah right. And considering Nintendo's software warranty is something ridiculously low like 90 days. Spend 70 bucks on a N64 game, and on the off chance that it does fuck up, you have to plop down another 70 bucks? Hell no.
Nintendo can kiss my ass. Then they can raid my safety deposit box with every NES/SNES/GB backed up on CDR. Dolts.
Most other consoles now use CDs and some are going to use DVD. Sure you may have a couple burned copies passed around, but who's going to download a 640mb-2gb files just to play a game?
ROM cartridges don't fit much, so games on ROM cartridges are small. Hence, less to download.
It is my policy that idiots are illegal. Nintendo policy has nothing to do with law. Maybe someone should point MS in this direction "Your honor, it is our policy that predatory behavior is legal".
Someone else asked "Does UltraHLE actually have any Nintendo code in it". If it (and others like SNES9x etc) dont, then they are NOT illegal, no matter WHAT way you slice it. It doesn't matter that they're used to play illegal games. Look at computers, they're often used to hold all sorts of illegal material. That doesn't result in the government seeking to ban them.
Correct me if I'm wrong, but aren't emulators designed from the ground up to resemble the operating behaviour of the actual console itself. By this rationale, Linux would be illegal because it unfairly resembles Unix, and companies selling Unixes could order all Linux sites shut down (yeah there are differences, but its similar enough for me =P)
Emulation can occur with clean rooming. There's no need to reverse engineer anything. I think you're just being sloppy with your terms.
"If one is really a superior person, the fact is likely to leak out without too much assistance" -- John Andrew Holmes
His point is that the FAQ says every emulator is illegal, and "the only purpose of an emulator is to play illegal roms copied off the internet". Super Game Boy is an emulator, so by NOA point of view it's illegal too.
I think it would be nice if somebody would also create development tools for a console as well as the emulator. I'd do it myself, but I'm still studying C... I think there is an assembler for nes roms, but that's all I've seen.
It just might make an emulator more legit if people were developing and playing original games on it.
The argument that it is a hobby -- and that people merely have an interest in the architecture -- is weak. There are a few dozen people with an interest in the architecture (enough interest to write an emulator), the other several thousand people involved are just playing/ditributing free games.
P.S. I used to have dozens of NES roms that I'd play, but then I went out and bought a few of the games (3-5 bucks each nowadays) and discovered that playing them on the console itself is much better than emulation.
In a way, this is very much the same argument made by the RIAA about mp3 players. The contention that the availability of some mechanism that allows someone to play an mp3 (or a rom game) automatically constitutes an illegal act is based on a flawed assumption.
Since it is legal to make copies of music or games that you already own, and to use those copies if you wish, it is also legal to use whatever mechanism you like to play them.
In a way, you could compare it to having a gun. Target practice, for example, is legal, killing someone is not. To automatically label the gun as illegal completely misses the issue, as it is the one who uses the gun that is responsible.
In exactly the same fashion, if someone uses a game emulator to play a game they already own, they are behaving legally, and if they do not own the game, they are breaking the law. It is therefore the individual breaking the law that is responsible, and not the mechanism that they use to break it.
Nunc Tutus Exitus Computarus.
It's not about who "deserves" to win and lose. We have IP laws, entities that agree with these laws may protect their works using these laws. No entity is forced to use these laws if they have moral objections, as is the case with many people distributing software under freeware licenses. Furthermore, no consumer is forced to buy products solely from entities protected by IP laws -- as can be seen by the free software movement.
When you buy a product from an entity that has protected their work using IP laws you are agreeing that you will not infringe on their rights under those laws. If you do not agree, then do not buy the product. It's very simple.
I suggest that all of you that dislike IP laws, go and start your own community and create your own unprotected works of music, literature, games, etc...please let the rest of us know how it goes. I suspect none of you will do this, since it's much easier to leach off of others (and spend the remainder of your time making up flawed justifications for your illegal actions), then it is to create.
Posted by _DogShu_:
Just as many people will use emulators and ROMs whether or not they are illegal. Nintendo is just going to spread the knowledge around that you don't need a console to play console games, and cause even more people to use emulators and ROMs.
The more people that use them, the harder it will be to find all the web sites for downloading them, and the problem will get even worse (for Nintendo).
Do it. Show me a link to a reputable, third party organization that makes a case. Even better, something written by a reputable member of the judicial community. Listing yourself as 'Anonymous Coward' doesn't help me in getting convinced.
As floppies are unreliable, and CD-ROMs are sensitive to damage, hard drives are built to fail. I cannot allow items that I install to die without having a backup. And because I have the installation materials of saftware, that doesn't mean I am going to put up with starting from scratch.
Don't forget that companies that sell tape backup materials suggest three tapes in a weekly backup cycle.
Even if you can make a reasonable case that the consumer doesn't have a right to make personal backups, it will be ignored because things fail.
Subject: Nintendo Boycott!
Date: Sun, 23 May 1999 01:15:12 +0200
From: Hroi Sigurdsson
To: nintendo@nintendo.com
For your actions against http://www.snes9x.com/ and your general attitude expressed in http://www.nintendo.com/corp/faqs/legal.html, I have no option but to boycott your products and warn future potential Nintendo customers about Nintendo's barbaric business practices.
Your statements in http://www.nintendo.com/corp/faqs/legal.html are for the most part bogus and do not enlighten readers of legal facts but only goes to show how Nintendo thwarts truth, common right and sense in the name of commerce. Stating that emulators are illegal is an outright lie! If an emulator is a cleanroom product it is perfectly legal. You can only patent mechanisms, but not concepts and no Nintendo code (=mechanisms) were used in the emulator (implementation of concept of running a specific instruction set).
And stating that linking to ROMS from a homepage is a legal offence, is completely bogus. (Try suing Yahoo/Infoseek etc. for linking to illegal ROMS).
Your scare campaign is only scaring off customers. And I will do what I can to scare your customers away from you (and I do know a few Nintendo users).
Scrapping his SNES,
Hroi Sigurdsson
hroi@get2net.dk
Sure, in practice most ROM's on the internet are going to be downloaded and used illegaly. The problem being, there is NO law in existence today that prevents users from placing backups of any software anywhere. Sure, its a stupid loophole in the law, but Nintendo's trying to stretch things a bit.
That's, uh, not true. You are legally allowed to back up carts for personal use only. Distributing the backup to others, be it over the internet or on a floppy, IS illegal.
"An emulator is a software program that is designed to allow game play on a platform that it was not created for."
You may recall that a few years back, Nintendo released a device called the Super Game Boy. This plugged into your SNES and emulated a Gameboy. It was a hardware/software program that is/was designed to allow game play on a platform that it was not created for.
I'm sure many of you are confused over this like I am - is Nintendo really selling an illegal product? I recommend you write to them at noalegal@noa.nintendo.com if you are as confused as I. ;)
The only purpose of video game emulators are to play illegal copied games from the Internet.
It can be disputed whether the game are illegal, it can also be disputed if the only purpose of emulators is play these games, I'm sure developers of emulators have other reasons.
--BWing
Dad always thought laughter was the best medicine, which I guess is why several of us died of tuberculosis.
"Are "Game Copying Devices" such as the Dr.V64, Z64 and Others, Illegal?
Yes. Game copiers enable users to illegally copy video game software onto floppy disks, writeable compact disks or the hard drive of a personal computer.
These devices also allow for the uploading and downloading of ROMs to and from the Internet. Based upon the functions of these devices, they are illegal. "
By those thoughts and beliefs, CD-R/CD-RW drives and even compression programs are illegal. Anything that makes XXXXXXX are illegal is what they are saying.
Every emulator case (in the US) has been found legal, find a new isp, one that has balls enough to stand up to a stupid cause like this.
No, SNES9x is at version 0.19: have you been playing
with your time machine again?
(And 0.19 came out just a week or two ago.)
It was Gates who started the meaning number 3 of piracy. But he's one of the software mafia.
Perhaps you should do a little reading yourself. The right to pursue happiness in not granted in the Constitution; it is stated in the Declaration of Independence that you have this right by virtue of being born.
As to the issue at hand, the Constitution gives Congress the power "to promote the progress of science and useful arts by securing for limited times to authors and inventors the exclusive rights to their respective writings and discoveries." A law that extends this protection to more than double the lifetime of most authors and inventors is obviously not what was meant by this passage. A little more reading will also inform you that copyright came within a hair's breadth of being outlawed altogether in this country.
Actually, console manufacturers sell their machines at a loss. The real money lies in selling devkits, licensing logos etc. That's probably why Nintendo reacted so badly when a company made some games for the NES without buying the proper licenses. Nintendo sued this company (Acclaim, if I remember correctly) and lost. A related example: the Gameboy runs cartridges only if the Nintendo logo is in a certain place in ROM memory. The only way to (legally) include that logo is to buy the license or the logo from Nintendo.
While this strict control of developed and released games may seem unnecessarily strict and wrong, it's the main reason that console games have the reputation for quality that they have. By reviewing all games, the maker of the machine (Nintendo, Sega, Sony etc.) ensure that only the best games get released. They can simply pull the plug on dud ones. You couldn't find console games with serious bugs until fairly recently and that's mainly Sony's fault. But since revenues are dependant on the amount of games sold, not systems, the quality of games have to be kept high and games of dubious quality are censored (ever wondered why many more 'adult' titles were never released outside Japan and those that were, were often released as 'nice' versions).
Nintendo Site:" ... i.e. NO
"Can I Download a ROM from the Internet if I Already Own the Authentic Game? "
blah blah blah
The point is is that they are saying that there is no legal way to play a game under a emulator.
It is probably legal for a game vendor to do this...
_However_ There are many game vendors. As a customer I will buy from one produces good games and who cares for their customers. eg. www.lokigames.com?
As a paying customer (i.e. someone who has paid for a legal copy of the game), I am entitled to whinge if I feel I am not getting my money's worth. If Nintendo does not want me to play their games the way I may want to, that is fine, I just won't buy them. No skin off my nose.
>none of you will do this, since it's much easier >to leach off of others (and spend the remainder >of your time making up flawed justifications for >your illegal actions), then it is to create.
_I_ _do_ _not_ _intend_ _to_ _play_ _any_ _Nintendo_ _Games_, as long as they think they can treat their customers like this. I have bought Authentic software, and intend to buy Civ: CTP from www.lokigames.com. Lokigames seems to care about Customers, it is actively helping customers to use software on non-standard platforms.
Also due to free speech etc. etc. I am perfectly entitled to warn other potential customers that Nintendo does not seem to care about the wishes of paying customers.
We use GNU/SunOS.
I really don't care for that tone in their FAQ. Who the hell do they think they are - it sounds to me like "This is ours, ours, ours. You stick to our rules or else we'll sue you and stamp our feet until we get what we want."
I own a N64 and have never run any Nintendo emulation but love playing my Spectrum games emulated (my Speccies take too long to load).
They've seriously made me think about not buying any more games for my N64 - hell it's not even as good as my PC anyway.
That's not quite correct--you've overlooked the possibility of contributory infringement. If Nintendo is right that the archival exception of section 117 of the Copyright Act does not apply to games in ROM (there is legislative history and some case law to support this, but I think they are going a little overboard when they state this is well established), then the end user who uses the emulator is violating copyright. In that case, those how provide the tools (in this case, the emulator) can be help vicariously liable for that infringement.
Whether this happens or not depends on what kind of uses there are for the emulator that do not involve infringing copyright.
They could play my game that I have writen using the free NES development tools. Or is developing my own game with free development tools illeagle too?
In the late 80's Atari made a number of carts under the tengen name. NOA took them to court on the basis that in order to play on their system (the NESat that time) the carts had to validate via some secret code and that code was copyright or patented by Nintendo. The court upheld and Atari was on the slippery slope to hell. Atari is now dead, don't even talk about the arcade machines that belongs to williams. Anyway This upheld the yakuza business model that ALL the japanese game companies work under. You must be an official licensee in order to develop for Nintendo/Sega/Sony. You Pay to be a licensee, the license states they have the right allow or deny you publishing your software based on their approval or disapproval. (This was all held up in OUR courts folks!)
They also get a royalty based on carts/cd produced not on those sold! TI tried a similar route with their home PC but no one would develop for it. Imagine Apple, Dell etc creating a bit of validation code and any software produced having to pay a fee to use the validation and Apple etc. having rufusal rights to any software developed for the platform. (or even worse M$ using the same argument to protect their OS)
This was deemed legal by the courts as they ruled that consoles are not cumputers! This happened when the license for tetris sued nintendo over tetris and lost on the basis that a console is not a computer and nintendo owned the license for consoles. I was there I worked with the guys. This all happened over ten years ago and I don't think that it has been argued since.
I beleive the entire console industry is based on an illegal standard that was held up in court because the court did not understand that consoles are and were computing devices. This has outraged me for many years and I beleive stifled the console software market. Look at the diversity in computer based software compared to console games. Since the console industry detirmines what can be published on their systems we end up with the drivel that they allow. Basically all the games look and play the same, and we all eat it up. Anyway this is thepart of the laws that should be attacked. Anyone with the desire should be allowed to create software for the platform without paying OR approval of the platform creator.
Of course, if you can point me at any FSF-authored software that can only be obtained by giving them money, go ahead. I will organize a group to buy one copy and make it free in both senses of the word. (And if I can't, then it's not GPLed.)
According to the FAQ, ROMs are exempt from archival backup laws. If this is the case, then it would be illegal to posess images of ROMs without consent of copyright holder. It should be obviously illegal to posses a ROM cartridge and an image of the ROM and use both of them. Such practice is like installing one license of software on two machines. An emulator of a device should not be illegal assuming no illegal practicies were involved in its manufacture. Such a program can be an excellent test bed for amature game developers.
There would be no doubt to the legality of such a device if it read the data directly from the actual ROM (through a hacked port). Nintendo is wrong when they say that the sole purpose of emulators is for playing illegally downloaded ROMs. This is a generalization. Such claims are the cause for persecution and hatred of people. Generalizations are claims with no basis that are used to create an enemy where one does not exist. I am sure some people have used emulators to test out games they have written.
Nintendo needs to accept the fact that piracy is illegal, and hacking is not. The hackers that study these devices for long hours and learn how they work and how to mimic them are intelligent and creative people who done no wrong. Nintendo needs to put blame where it is due and stop the real problem. Hitler persecuted the Jews because there was a depression that they were not responsible for. Nintendo is persecuting these brilliant hackers because other people are breaking laws.
Just think where we would be if IBM had stopped Compaq with the claim that "Clones are illegal."
Don't you guys ever try to look at things from the other side?
/.
Emulators ARE providing a way for people to play games without buying the games. Nintendo, even though it is a mega-corp, IS losing revenue.
Now, emulators themselves shouldn't be illegal, because they are just another string of 1's and 0's. However, they are contributing to an amount of piracy.
"Hold on", I hear you saying. "I own the games, in cartridge form. Possessing and running the affiliated ROMs with an emulator shouldn't be illegal". Yup, you're right. In a way, this does infringe on your own personal freedoms. But let's just say that Nintendo wasn't such a big game vendor, but just a programmer somewhere who makes mighty good console games. Does he deserve to be protected? Does his protection exceed your right to run his games? (is this a bad analogy? Does size really make that big a difference? Before you say "yes", think about this: should big companies be attacked more fiercely just because they're big?)
This argument is identical to the MP3 debates...sure, you have a right to do whatever you want on your computer...but there are winners and losers in both battles. Who deserves to win, and who deserves to lose?
I think a there is the largest concentration of above average intelligent people on the internet here on slashdot. But every time I see a "screw the RIAA" or "screw Nintendo" without providing solutions that will appease both parties, I wonder where these people all disappeared to.
Before you flame, note that I'm playing devil's advocate more than defending the bad guys...the issues aren't as clear cut as you guys think it is. I think there's such thing as a possible win-win solution for these issues. If the solution is found, I'm sure it'll have something to do with
<tim><
Uhh..
WRONG.
Software NEVER passes into the public domain unless it's given there by the author/controlling body of the copyright.
Just because something's obsolete doesn't mean that it's yours. That's like saying we should just go get Commodore 64's for free cause they aren't being made anymore. While they are WORTH ZIP, they are NOT public domain.
J
CD-R/CD-RW drives are not illegal beacause they actually have a legitimate purpose besides pirating software. Game copying devices have no legal purpose.
Nintendo, sony, IDSA, Euro-NAzi-IDSA need to be sued for libel, constitutional infringements, and judges need to see that protectionism, paranoia, FUD, and demonizing are an artifact of the middle ages. This needs to stop.!!!!
The ship sank. Get over it. (This sig was cut out from another's shirt and painstakingly hand-posted)
Yes. All ROMs available on the Internet are unauthorized and infringing copies of copyrighted works
Sure, in practice most ROM's on the internet are going to be downloaded and used illegaly. The problem being, there is NO law in existence today that prevents users from placing backups of any software anywhere. Sure, its a stupid loophole in the law, but Nintendo's trying to stretch things a bit.
Can I Download a ROM from the Internet if I Already Own the Authentic Game?
There is a good deal of misinformation on the Internet regarding the backup/archival copy exception. It is not a "second copy" rule and is often mistakenly cited for the proposition that if you have one lawful copy of a copyrighted work, you are entitled to have a second copy of the copyrighted work even if that second copy is an infringing copy. That is utterly ridiculous and legally unsupported. Therefore, whether you have the authentic game or not, or whether you have possession of the ROM for a limited amount of time (24 hours), it is illegal and infringing of a copyright to download and play a ROM from the Internet.
The backup/archival copy exception is a very narrow limitation relating to a copy being made by the rightful owner of an authentic game to ensure he or she has one in the event of damage or destruction to the authentic. It is well established by judicial decisions in the United States that this limited exception does not apply to game data contained in ROM semiconductor chips in video game cartridges.
When pray tell was this decision made? Further, I'd be very curious to see anyone prove that a backup of software was made by anyone other than the user!
What is Nintendo's Position on the N64 Emulator, the UltraHLE?
The UltraHLE is illegal. The N64 emulator infringes Nintendo's intellectual property rights, including copyrights, and circumvents Nintendo's anti-piracy security system. I'm afraid this point is just blatantly false, as Sony's case with Connectix and Bleam has shown. As for Nintendo's "anti-piracy" system, this has been called legally suspect by many observers.
Does Nintendo Believe the UltraHLE Violates its Intellectual Property Rights?
Yes
I believe I'm still as in shape as I was in high school. Believing it doesn't make it true.
Does Nintendo Think Emulation Companies Promote Piracy? Why?
Yes. The only purpose of video game emulators are to play illegal copied games from the Internet
What a profound argument. That'll hold up in court.
Are "Game Copying Devices" such as the Dr.V64, Z64 and Others, Illegal?
Yes. Game copiers enable users to illegally copy video game software onto floppy disks, writeable compact disks or the hard drive of a personal computer. They enable the user to make, play and distribute illegal copies of video game software which violates Nintendo's copyrights and trademarks. These devices also allow for the uploading and downloading of ROMs to and from the Internet. Based upon the functions of these devices, they are illegal.
Huh? By that logic, my diskdrive is illegal because I can copy programs and "upload" them to the Internet!
The only thing even remotely on target was the comment about copyright law. Sure ISP's could be held liable if anything could be proven, but Nintendo's going to need a MUCH better argument than this(I suggest they look at the fact that Sony made the exact same arguments and lost twice).
... except for the small but inconvenient fact that when I buy something, it's mine to do with what I choose, provided I don't violate anyone's rights.
The problem is that you only paid a license fee that allowed you to use the software for a limited amount of time. You do not own anything! Software companies can typically demand that you return the software at any time.
Silhouette was someone's hack of an existing version of snes9x, in all likelyhood. Both games produced the same sorts of errors when fed the same sorts of data, and both had the same gamegenie scheme (and tell me, why would a nintendo programming environment include a gamegenie scheme?). It was a good program, and it was ahead of snes9x for a few months, but if you believe any of the x-files crap in the docs, then you're quite naive.
"If one is really a superior person, the fact is likely to leak out without too much assistance" -- John Andrew Holmes
CD-R/CD-RW drives are not illegal beacause they actually have a legitimate purpose besides pirating software. Game copying devices have no legal purpose.
What purpose do CD-R/RW drives have? They can back up your software, game copying devices can back up your software as well.
Since you seem to think that backing up your data is not a legitimate purpose, then please tell me if you think tape backups have a legitimate purpose or if they should be made illegal.
I really had the same view like you, but with NINTENDO and SONY harassing people for products they no longer sell or support I've changed my mind. Also while NINTENDO has a right to be pissed, people has a right to code as they like, and while this my be a perjudice to nintendo, IT's not illegal per se, also if NINTENDO was smart enough they'll get a fair benefit selling their games in cd's along with the cartidges. If they don't think that, that's their problem, they have the opportunity of broading their market and they're breaking it down, also they're getting a really bad reputation on the retrogamming circles.
"What is Nintendo's Position on the N64 Emulator, the UltraHLE?
The UltraHLE is illegal. The N64 emulator infringes Nintendo's intellectual property rights, including copyrights, and circumvents Nintendo's anti-piracy security system. "
Well it is Nintendo position. It's their right to consider it illegal. The other side of the question is if any court of law in any country has ruled in favour of Nintendo.
I've have saw of some cases of "supposed" copyright infrigements here in Russia. But unfortunately most of them do not run away from a few harsh notes through E-mail. Besides it has to be noted that in some situations the "victim" seems to break the law in some serious points. Recently this could be seen on Macromedia vs Ivanopolo E-mail exchange. Sincerly Macromedia risked the fact that Ivanopolo could sue them for threat of extortion.
Let's face a fact. A product can be illegal if a court of law has ruled against it. The problem is that under such rulings the author of any emulator could face some consequences, so most of them drop their ventures before going to court. But, in fact, until then, there are no reasons to fetch emulators the label "illegal" before a ruling is made. See the similar Diamond's case with RIO player.
Until then, emulators are pure legal guess. So let's guess. Frankly I'm doing some points out of our reality here in Russia. So someway they may not fit other countries.
If I write a program on my own then the thing is my copyright. I can only violate Nintendo's rights if I _insert_ Nintendo's code (source, binary) inside of my program and distribute it together. Whereas Nintendo and my program live away from each other I am not violating Nintendo's rights. Apart from the fact that they fit each other.
Emulators are a huge thing in software. While no one "copies" property code to implement the emulation, these emulators have a right to live.
Meanwhile emulation is an universal conception. Why Nintendo claims to be an exception to the rules? If we think that emulators are illegal then Nintendo is itself in trouble. If it takes a careful look around they will find a whole world of emulators running even on the most simple PC. This might look a little bit philosophical but it is a fact. And even if Nintendo produced toasters they did not have the right to cry against emulation of toasted bread.
Besides there is a serious caveat in Nintendo's claims. They claim illegality of a program because it uses software _ALREADY_ pirated! Why the illegality of one presumes the illegality of the other? Is a lockpick illegal because there are a lot of lockpicked doors around? It's nonsense.
The best argument of Nintendo is the fact that one of these emulators "circumvents" their security. Sorry people. Beyond this you have to prove that exactly this circumvention allows to _distribute_ the product of your work and not the use. And that this distribution affects your profits. In Russia copyright laws only begin to act when the copy/distribution process directly affects the revenue of the copyrightowner. I can make a million copies of Windows CD and fill the walls of my house with them. Microsoft has no right to sniff through my door for this. If Bill tries to step the door of my house without courtruling he surely would get everything out of an AK/47. And I'm in my right to do it. Even if I would keep illegally the weapon. But that would be another case.
ok, since you didnt leave an e-mail address, i hope you read this.
The way that i understood the page was that, if you used a "device" for cheating on a game or playing ROMs you didnt make will void the warrenty. But, if you make a copy of a game that is illegal, since (i belive) cause the author never gave consent (i may be wrong, dont flame me).
i know that it may sound a bit contradictory, but you gotta clear your mind and read carefully to understand.
Loop holes are a bitch arent they ?
It is true that the FAQ could be claiming that UltraHLE may be violating the Nintendo copyright on Mario and Zelda via contributory infringement, not the Nintendo copyright on N64 system code by direct infringment. Of course, it's such a poorly written FAQ...
Well, it's high time somebody started writing development software for these emulators so they have a legitimate use, isn't it? Where did I leave that "Teach Yourself C in 21 days", anyway?
Methinks you'd be singing a different tune if you had royalties coming in off of a console game you labored 12 months to create.
You people that want your precious freedoms better read the constitution again. It gives you the right to pursue happiness, so long as you don't start infringing on other people's rights to do the same.
So you can boycott Nintendo all you want, but you better do it for real, and throw away all your Nintendo EMU's and ROM's.
Have a look at N64 games and think about this. Those games have this muddy, blurry look to them because the cartridges can only hold so much in the way of _textures_. If you look at console games on PSX, you'll see CDs filled with textures. Of course, they also contain CDAudio and rendered sequences, but the core game will still be 10-50x bigger than an N64 game.
This is even more true on the PC where you have games like Unreal that have NO CDAudio and NO pre-rendered sequences, the discs are all textures and levels.
Plus, you can't rip these features from console games the same way; it breaks the game.
Richmond != Redmond
:)
'nuff said
Another AC about to be annhiliated by the TRUTH...
---BEGIN QUOTE---
USC, Title 17 Sec. 117.
Limitations on exclusive rights: Computer
programs
Notwithstanding the provisions of section 106, it is not an
infringement for the owner of a copy of a computer program to
make or authorize the making of another copy or adaptation of
that computer program provided:
(1) that such a new copy or adaptation is created as an
essential step in the utilization of the computer program
in conjunction with a machine and that it is used in no
other manner,
OR
(2) that such new copy or adaptation is for archival
purposes only and that all archival copies are destroyed
in the event that continued possession of the computer
program should cease to be rightful. Any exact copies
prepared in accordance with the provisions of this
section may be leased, sold, or otherwise transferred,
along with the copy from which such copies were
prepared, only as part of the lease, sale, or other
transfer of all rights in the program. Adaptations so
prepared may be transferred only with the authorization
of the copyright owner.
----END QUOTE----
Looks legal to me, and absolutely NO MENTION OF "durable media" so
this dispels heresay that you can backup floppies but not roms or CDs.
Note also, there's NO MENTION OF licensed sw, only the "owner of
a copy of the program". I did not buy the program. I am not the
owner of the program. I am the OWNER OF THE COPY of the program.
I bought a shiny silvery disc. I own the media. I own the copy,
but not what's on it. I CAN make a backup copy and the software
publishers cannot stop me unless we have a signed contract bearing
real signatures between us that prohibits this. Shrinkwrap licenses
are meaningless. If fact, the law specifically allows copying
licensed software since it says that copies must be transferred
to the new owner/licensee or destroyed if the LICENSE is transferred
terminated as well as sold. Only "adaptations" require permission
of the copyright owner, NOT MAKING ARCHIVAL COPIES. And adaptations
are not what we're talking about here.
Here is one of the interesting things which is why the article by Moglen, "Anarchism Triumphant". If the architecture of the PSX is covered by a patent, then even if connectix was able to implement the same thing through different methods, they still are in violation of the patent. So thus it would be illegal. Thus why I don't like patents. But I'm not clear on what happened in the legalities of the SCEA vs Connectix case.
I'd assume the same would hold true for the N64 (I'm sure there are patents in there). So with that being true, why haven't they bothered to go after dextrose? As I'm sure most of the stuff there isn't licensed to use the patent. This brings me up to another question, if you need to have a license to make N64 (and I would assume PSX games) what about if you own a Yarooze system (blue playstation). Does that come with a license?
My Slashdot account is old enough to drink...
the recent disposition of a EEUU tribunal declaring software as a language and thus protected by the free speech amend of the constitution takes down avery other legal argument.
The court ruling didn't say that source code/software is free to be copied by anyone and everyone. It only said that source code can't be prevented from export if the legal owners want it to be exported.
The thing is that nintendo is using this web page to legally threaten individuals. They are passing off "we believe" quasi-legal statements as real law in an attempt to shut down compitition. This is wrong. This is evil. This should be illegal.
So if I invent a better sausage machine, from thin air, without looking at existing (patented) sausage machines, the fact that it produces a sausage is an infringement of SausageCo's patent?
Who decides whether a salami is different from a pork sausage?
Aren't patents the protection of a mechanism (or it's electronic equivalent), rather than the protection against 'all things that cause effect X or procuce output X'?
"don't fall into the fallacy of believing that Perl can solve social problems. Maybe Perl 6 can, but that's a ways off"
What Does Nintendo Think of the Argument that an Emulator Like the UltraHLE is Actually Good for Nintendo Because it Promotes the Nintendo Brand to PC Users and Leads to More Sales of N64 Games?
Distribution of an emulator trades off of Nintendo's goodwill and the millions of dollars invested in research & development and marketing by Nintendo and its licensees. Substantial damages are caused to Nintendo and its licensees. It is irrelevant whether or not someone profits from the distribution of an emulator. The emulator promotes the play of illegal ROMS, NOT authentic games. Thus, not only does it not lead to more sales, it has the opposite effect and purpose.
Translation: when we announced the N64, people said we were stupid for using ROMs, when more cost-effective and easier-to-copy-protect media like CD-ROMs were generally available. We thought we showed them. This emulator stuff really makes us look stupid because if we had used CDs like Sony did people would be buying the games instead of downloading them. Since we're too stupid to strike a deal with the UltraHLE authors in which we acquire UltraHLE as a commercial product and sell it with a parallel port cartridge adapter so that it can only be used with real N64 cartridges, no one can use UltraHLE with genuine ROMs even if they wanted to, and we'll pretend that no one does just to strengthen our position. In view of this, we have also sent cease and desist letters to anyone who has ever written an emulator for our hardware (such as the booming Super Famicom/SNES market, which is currently tied with Sega Genesis in sales because no one buys either of them). Fa fa fa, buy more N64s.
You realize, of course, that N64's are illegal
because innocent people can be brutally beaten, even murdered, by using a whole N64 or its parts.
(Sorry if I accidentally posted part of this message earlier, I hit "enter" too soon)
Thanks to the new "Digital Millennium Copyright Act," (ISP owners everywhere have Clinton to thank for this) ISPs can be held responsible for their users' copyright violations. The ISP becomes responsible only after the copyright owner has notified the ISP of the violations and given them a period of time to deal with it.
There are ways to avoid this though, George Lucas told ISPs that bootleg Star Wars MPEGs are illegal before the movie even came out, so now if anyone distributes Star Wars the ISPs can be held responsible since they've already been notified.
I have a big problem with emulating current systems, except the PSX (which, if only the stupid blind idiots at Sony would take a look, actually increases their bottom line with every sale). The reason: piracy does happen on emulators. A lot (I do believe it would happen less if there were an easy way to get a cartridge into a computer; since there isn't most of us must rely on ROM's). And I think it isn't fair to do that to a current system.
Past systems for which games are no longer made? That's another subject entirely. There, my views mesh with those of most retrogamers.
I do have trouble with UltraHLE, therefore, and I think Nintendo does have a right to get pissed off over that one. They can't do anything about it, true, but in any case UltraHLE should never have been made, at least not until Dolphin was out and kicking.
nintendo needs their lawyer's heads examined. saying emulators is illegal is like saying that it's illegal to load a MS Word document in Star Office...
(1) clear laws (or court decisions) eliminating software patents and upholding emulation and reverse-engineering
This would be difficult to do (especially since IP laws can vary widely from country to country), but this would definitely be a very positive step forward. Perhaps not upholding emulation itself (commercial emulators of current system created by reverse engineering should not be protected, IMO), but protecting free emulators (developed for "educational" purposes), provided that they make their source freely available (the only reasonable "educational" purpose) should be a priority.
My personal favorite patented software algorithm is Sega's patent on the use of 3D cameras (i.e. any game or application making use of realtime 3D cameras. Basically this allows them to collect royalties for any game that uses a 3D camera (i.e. Final Fantasy VII, Quake, massive etc.). Thankfully, since Sega is an acceptable company, they haven't bothered to invoke this (just check out their support of emulation with the use of KGen98 in their recent "classics" release!). Even though Sega hasn't used this ridiculous patent, things like this should not be patentable in case certain other companies were to start invoking their rights.
It's sort of scary, but it's pretty clear that if Microsoft made consoles and someone came up with an emulator, Microsoft would go buy the emulator from them, package whatever is necessary to play authentic games (ie. cartridges), and start selling it. Embrace and extend, Nintendo.
They could even use a bit of public key cryptography to make sure that the cartridge adapter was a genuine Nintendo one (it might raise the price a bit, but not enough to make the price unattractive to consumers), and patent the damn adapter so no one else could make one. If it was reasonably priced, consumers would buy it, and would thank Nintendo for such a cool product.
I guess they really f***ed this one up.
You do not need to modify the N64 at all to play illegally copied roms. For about $140 you can buy a device that plugs into the cartridge slot on the N64 and can download games from your PC thru the parallel port.
Most people who do this get the N64 roms off the internet. As for PlayStation CDs, few download them, either they copy them from friends or rent the game for one night and copy it.
Does 'the problem will get even worse' mean that Nintendo will begin to lose real money to pirates?
Just imagine, all that is needed for the last game to be enjoyed by all the Net is buying ONE copy, then perhaps waiting one week to circumvent the last anti-piracy trick. Do you think they could stay in business like that? Well, maybe they wouldn't have to close, they'd just have to lay some people off, most likely not the CEO. How cool, almost 3l33t...
I think copyrights for software do pass into the public domain...but only after a few decades just like books and other media...except that computer stuff becomes old and obsolete well before it becomes public domain!
Actually, for a long time Nintendo did force third party game makers into an exclusivity license. Something to the effect that you had to release your games only for the NES for a period of 2 years. I believe they stopped this practice after/during their antitrust case with the government..
For a very long time Nintendo did have a complete lock on the console market. It finally broke with the Genesis which was a great deal more powerful than the NES and still took quite a bit of time to get going. The master system was more powerful than the NES and it still failed.
And you're not supposed to be allowed to back it up, because it doesn't need to be backed up. Well, I have hundreds of Atari 2600/ColecoVision/C64/etc. game cartridges and some of the software (including on the C64 motherboard) are stored in EPROM. The old 2716s claimed a data retention period of 13 or so years. Let's see... that's about now! i don't know about mased ROMs, but I do know that everything rots eventually so I will continue to backup.
Some on the game newsgroups extend the "durable media" argument to CDROM based games. They say they're illegal to backup because they don't decay. Well, go and rent any popular game from Blockbuster and see just how 'durable' CDROMs are. They are often unplayable due to minor scratches and scuffing. Nope. Doesn't look durable to me. And when a single game can cost almost $100USD (I buy expensive Japanese imports) for my kids (even good kids aren't always careful) I make sure they use a CDR copy and keep the original locked safely away.
It must be something with the air up there in
Richmond...all the companies there seem to be very paranoid and try to immediatly stop all development of emulators etc.
what a strange coincidence that Nintendo and M$ are located in the same city...
no text
Anyone with a legal background mind sifting throught through the drivel at http://www.nintendo.com/corp/faqs/legal.html
?
Nazi-tendo did a great job of creating the ugliest, most opiniated article I've personally seen in a page of "Legal Information".
"You know, Hobbes, some days even my lucky rocketship underpants don't help" -- Calvin
Neither buisnesses nor the federal government can enforce laws preventing software from being developed or distributed unless it uses code or other software components that were protected under copyright. Like it or not, Nintendo couldn't even prevent another game company from making a nintendo "clone" if it used nothing but unprotected or independently developed resources. This is a competitive marketplace, and Nintendo, like it or not, can't say "You may not develop an emulator for our games", just like they can't say "You may not sell plain-text cheat books about our games" "You may not develop a console that can run our cartidges" or "You may not release games for the nintendo that do not get our seal of approval." If they wish to do that, they can not sell their product in the United States. We have laws and rights that encourage competition, and that is really all snes9x is. Competition. At least Nintendo should take the Microsoft point of view and BUY them out, there's much more honor and legal backing there.
Nintendo, emulators are not illegal. Emulation is not illegal either. Distributing copyrighted material is. If you don't get that straight right now, ya'll will probably regret it later. IP lawyers really love this stuff. Bottom line: Only two types of software is illegal. Pirated software and software that illegaly uses copyrighted code. snes9x was neither of those.
Saying "Emulators are illegal." is like Betty Crocker saying "Cookbooks that we don't make are illegal." You can not kill a product just because it can or may cut into profits, just like Microsoft can't kill Linux for the same reasons.
I don't mean to be all negative but I'm sure most of you who have used snes9x or any other emulator have used illegal copies of games. I know they don't have the right to close down the emulator site or to post a blantantly false FAQ but they do have the right to protect their interests no matter how mean and big brother like it may seem to us. I have never owned either a Sega, Sony or Nintendo console(let alone an arcade machine!) and I have no intention of ever buying one, doesn't mean I'm not gonna use snes9x or the host of other emulators. And I KNOW I'm one person out a many in the same situation.
EmuHQ has this FAQ commented for a while. It's here.
I never endorsed piracy in the first place. Let's be honest people, how many of you have ever seen a ROM image for an emulator that wasn't pirate? Ripping off the console makers is not a solution. But neither is supporting them.
I've finally had it: until slashdot gets article moderation, I am not coming back.
I find it funny how just matter-of-factly say, "All Roms on the Internet are illegal"
Yes, 99.9% ARE, but what if someone made an original rom or something, like some of the demos I've seen. They are not illegal...
Emulators are perfectly legal. Sony recently tried and failed to obtain an injuction to block the shipment of the Bleem! Playstation emulator.
But of course, the amount of justice you get is directly proportional to the amount of money you have and are willing to spend. Nintendo knows full well that the people behind snes9x are very likely to just going stop developing the emulator rather than fight a costly legal battle with Nintendo -- ordinary people can't be fighting legal battles with mega-corporations; see the bleem page for how much it cost those guys just to fight Sony.
Right! what point are the pens other than to write down where to download emulators? the cameras are not useful for anything other than taking pictures of the game boxes at the local EB to paste in a launcher program.
And we all know that computers are the only way to run emulators.. I mean shoot, what other purpose could it possibly have besides this dubious one?
Hmmmm.....
The names seemed a bit suspicious too... Silhouette and Mirage...
Still, how much of what is said in the doc is true? (reguarding the SNES dev system)
I have a copy of the source code to Snes9x and I happen to be an experienced programmer. So fuck Nintendo. Let them sound their bird call in vain. The PC will be their downfall in more ways than one and I'll be laughing all the way to the cash register.
Actually, look at the header. Proper credit is given, which is all that is required for usage of a document as a reference: Ours at EmuHQ is a response, a criticism if you will, and we have EVERY right to quote nintendo (using the red/black text to smooth it out) and their so-called "FAQ".
It was Gates who coined the phrase 'software pirate'. But M$ is just the biggest 'software street gang'.
Posted by Kevin Seghetti:
;-)
It is fairly likely your dictionary posting is a copyright violation
Notice that defintion 3 doesn't resemble the other 2 (which are really the same) in any way. Also notice definition 3 is less than 20 years old, where the others a little older. (If you used a dictionary old enough to avoid violating copyright by posting its defintion, it would not contain the third definition.)
I don't think it's the ROMS per se that are illegal, but how people are getting them. Ever wonder what the "Official Seal of Approval" is on your Nintendo games? Is it some seal of quality that Nintendo assigns to game packs? Nope. It's the sign that Nintendo got some royalties off of the sale of that cart. That's why Nintendo fought Tengen and Camerica (not sure if this came up on the SNES.) So Big 'N' doesn't make a dime off of your download. I'm sure we'd hear the same thing from Atari for all their emulators, if Atari was in any recognizable form nowadays.
What is Nintendo's Position on the N64 Emulator, the UltraHLE?
The UltraHLE is illegal. The N64 emulator infringes Nintendo's intellectual property rights, including copyrights, and circumvents Nintendo's anti-piracy security system
Does the UltraHLE (or any other emulator) actually include any Nintendo code? If not, it can't violate the copyright.
And Nintendo doesn't have an anti-piracy security system -- because the security system does not prevent illegal copies of the games from being made, or even played on an N64 (if you have the ability to manufacture cartriges). The so-called "anti-piracy security system" just prevents both legal and illegal copies from being executed on non-Nintendo machines.
On the other hand, imagine for a moment that one of the hardware cartridge copiers is adapted slightly to only load the code into your PC's RAM, where it is then executed by an emulator. This does not violate the Nintendo or cartridge copyrights at any point unless I've included actual Nintendo code in the emulator or copy the cartridge other than into RAM for execution, which I havent done. But the Nintendo "anti-piracy system" would prevent legal execution of the game -- unless my emulator circumvents it.
Accordingly, the "anti-piracy system" is not copy protection, so tools to circumvent it do not violate even the new U.S. copyright laws. So Nintendo can stuff it.
AFAIK, when the Nintendo 64 came out games for it required a one year exclusive contract with Nintendo to not release the game in any other format. I don't think they still have that given that some games have been released on the 64, PC and Playstation at the same time.
It is a mistake to think you can solve any major problems just with potatoes -- Douglas Adam -- Life, The Universe and E
Tengen continued to produce games for the NES after the Nintendo lawsuit. Only Tengen Tetris ceased production because Atari didn't have the home-version rights. Atari, BTW, produced the arcade version.
... except for the small but inconvenient fact that when I buy something, it's mine to do with what I choose, provided I don't violate anyone's rights.
It's certainly my right to protect my investment by making a backup of it. I bought the software (or if you like, the license to use the software) and I don't plan on letting something stupid like the degradation of the original media interfere with my right to use it!
1. Since the N legal FAQ was obviously not written by a lawyer, and IANAL, I feel qualified to respond.
2. If someone could point me to a law which says copying devices are illegal to own/build, cable TV descramblers are illegal to own/build, I'd appreciate it. Truthfully, I don't have either, but as far as I know, it is illegal to use those devices to commit illegal acts of copyright infringement, but not illegal to have them. Will M$ start arguing that computers are illegal because they can be used to pirate their stuff? Didn't the motion picture industry try to use the same argument against VCRs?
As I understand the copyright laws, it would be perfectly legal for someone to buy a legit copy of a game, and then use the device to make a copy.
3. Emulators developed without containing the copyrightable elements of a product, are not copyright infringement. Copyrights do not protect from duplicating designs or functionality. Patents do. (If a lawyer had written their FAQ, they would have not tried to use a copyright argument to explain why emulators are illegal. Well, maybe it was a bad lawyer.)
But one thing is true, if it weren't for copyright infringement, there wouldn't be much point in having an emulator. There would be so little to run on it.
Forrest J. Cavalier III, Mib Software Voice 570-992-8824
The Reuse RocKeT Efficient awareness for software reuse: Free WWW site
lists over 6000 of the most popular open source libraries, functions, and applications.
To make this short and sweet: THIS PISSES ME OFF
I love nintendo, and have always loved their games, and in fact, I was one of those people out at 5 in the morning to get in line to buy a Nintendo 64 the day it came out, but this makes me want to reconsider them as a company.
the 16 bit Super Nintendo hasnt come out with a new game in over a year as far as I know, and highly doubt that nintendo relies on or even makes ANY profit off the system for its money. This is why I dont see any reasoning behind their attack on SNES9X besides to be bastards. I think Nintendo needs to back off and let us have our fun, Connectix got a commercial emulator for the still widely popular PSX, why cant we have a free emulator for a system which would be long forgotten if it wasnt for emulation?
End of Rant.
Open Source is not gratis. It's simply naked. You have no right under the GPL to put any kind of clothes on it.
The ship sank. Get over it. (This sig was cut out from another's shirt and painstakingly hand-posted)
About ten years ago I saw an article in Compute! magazine about a computer (a 286, I believe) that could play Nintendo games. This computer actually had a slot for cartridges and even the same processors as a normal Nintendo (so it wasn't an emulator). It did, unfortunately, require a reboot to play the games, but on a non-multitasking platform this wasn't really a big deal anyway.
Now I'm sure some bright individual could have figured a way to use such a machine to copy ROMs and distribute them. But no one did. The machine was no threat to Nintendo's well-being. And this type of machine is the key to my proposal.
Today, with the N64, we have all sorts of piracy. It's not the emulators that are hurting Nintendo; it's the Internet itself. Even if Nintendo got rid of the emulators, we would still have piracy, but in a different form. Some minor modifications to the N64 hardware to take it's ROMs from a different location (a SCSI port on a computer perhaps?) and you've got an easy way to download games and play them illegally.
But the same cannot be said of Sony. They made the right move when they decided to put their games on CDs. Sure, there are people out there who pirate Playstation CDs, but I see very few Playstation CDs on the search engines. It's much easier to download a 16Meg ROM than it is to download a 650Meg CD.
You don't actually think that Microsoft's products have bloated just because they are bad programmers, do you? C'mon, given how much they are paid, these guys are some of the best coders in the industry. But small, neat code is easy to pirate, and large, though optimized code is much more difficult to copy.
It's for this reason that Nintendo should have gone CD. So the only people who can really effectively pirate games are those who are wealthy enough to afford a CD writer and/or a cablemodem. In a year perhaps this may not be quite so true, as bandwidth increases. So make the next generation of systesms DVD-based and you've bought yourself some time against the pirates out there.
But remember that one of Nintendo's competitors is not Sony or Sega, but the PC itself! Games like Quake, Halflife, Sin, and Unreal run beautifully on the PC with not much extra hardware. And a PC can do wordprocessing too. Try to do that on your N64!
In fact, many people are buying PC's just to play games. Wouldn't it stand to reason, if these people who play games on their PC's, if they could buy a cheap $50 device that connects to their computer would be likely to buy such a device to play ROM-based games? And if it has a mechanism that makes piracy difficult (yes, I know the technical difficulties with this), then all the better. So Nintendo would stand to make money both off the device and off the games they would sell to people who wouldn't normally buy N64 games anyway (like me), because they don't have an N64.
Consider for a moment an operating system that could run applications from any other operating system. Wouldn't such an operating system be extraordinarily useful? And if it worked well (i.e. fast and stable), it would be even better. That's what emulation is about. Why do we need ten systems to do the job of what one can do just fine? I say that's all the more reason to develop emulators. And see if you can get my PC to make coffee/hot chocolate as well (where's that heat from the CPU going, anyway?)
It is just wrong that people get denied the experience of experiencing classics like chronotrigger. 10 years old or no, they are still good games. Nintendo should either make the games available (howabout a ROM for the n64 featuring the collected works of square? sega did it) or shut up.
Free software authors, unlike a company such as Connectix, can't afford to defend themselves in court even against spurious copyright charges like this. With patents (even bad ones), it's even harder to prove innocence.
This sort of thing is a huge threat to free software in general. The only solutions I can think of don't seem likely to happen any time soon: (1) clear laws (or court decisions) eliminating software patents and upholding emulation and reverse-engineering and (2) a legal defense fund for free software (only a partial solution).
If a thing is not diminished by being shared, it is not rightly owned if it is only owned & not shared. S. Augustine
Most emulators are written not by companies, but by individuals or small teams of individuals who then distribute their code on personal home pages. Now the makers of Bleem may have the bucks and the team of company lawyers to combat Sony's legal team. But for people like you and me, who cannot afford to spend money full time while not earning any income to fight years-long court battles is just ludicrous. Inability to endure the legal process means many who were sued by big companies just gave up even though they were in the right. So being right or wrong doesn't always matter. Simply having money to burn wins you court cases too and lets you freely trample the little guy. While the ACLU may help a lucky few, they don't have enough resources to help everyone being walked on by big companies. We need a 'pre-trial' for those filing suits to force them to convince a judge that a trial is at least merited before they can sue others.
Rock stars also let you tape to a DAT! Get a grip. As for playing "pirated" games. If you want to go ahead and download games that are 30-50MB in size you go ahead do that on single phone line your whole household uses.
And stop saying piracy. Players are not guerilla arsonists murdering truck drivers in an ambush.
The industry is bent on convincing people that in this world there are game playing couch potatoes who couldn't tell a good story if their life depended on it, the companies who entertain and are the only ones who can make a game by some divine fortune. Oh yeah and them stinkin, ugly, murderin criminals, them pirates. Get real!
The ship sank. Get over it. (This sig was cut out from another's shirt and painstakingly hand-posted)
ok, this is just one of my whacked out ideas, but it is a proven fact that history repeats. I could be wrong, but didnt life all out suck right before the reenaissance? now look at today's world, the school killings, the big businesses, all this legal copyright crap, and the impending y2k problem. maybe all this bs that is going on is a good thing, a sign of things to come? who knows, we might be on the edge of a revolution in thinking, a new renaissance?
Just my
I am John Ital i'm just too lazy to remember my login.
/. nintendo.com
t or.html and tell them why you won't by nintendo products from them and suggest that you won't shop there at all until either they quit selling nintendo or nintendo changes their policy.
e tailers.html on-line retailers.
First:
-I do not believe intelectual(SP?) property should be protected by law. ('I thought of it so I own it' is innane)
-I do not believe in and do not obey the majority of US/California/San Francisco laws that are punishing 'victimless' crimes. (and no the government nor Corporations count as victims)
-I feel greatly oppressed and cheated by large corporations and feel it is my duty to fight back.
-I believe the only way to affect a corporation is through its bottom line, which usually means bad PR, bad Press (for publicly traded Co,) or threats of boycott by enough potential consumers.
This causes me to take actions against corporations that are quasi-illegal or flat-out illegal.
If after reading that you think I'm childish or immature or just the anti-christ of capitalism please do not read below and flame me if you want but be warned I won't flame back and so I'm not so fun to attack. Please do attack/agree/question/improve/flame the content of this message if you are so inclined.
If everyone aggreed it sure would be a boring place, huh?
I think everyone who is pissed off or just mildly disturbed by Nitendo being able to send a letter and deney someone the ability to share his/her work with others should do any or all of the following.
-Call the, or any/all, toll-free number 1-800-633 3236 many, many times. If you can leave a message or talk to someone say either
1. what you think!
2. That they suck for being such paranoid, greedy bastards and that you just wanted to cost them 15 cents on their toll-free bill.
- Call tech support 1-800-255-3700 and ask how you can play XXX cartridge on your PC, MAC, or SGI. If they say you can't ask when such a capability will be possible. If never or no plans ask why is nintendo not concerned with the needs of its customers, why they are pursuing a closed, proprietary strategy that can only hurt game-players and profit nitendo, and so-on using up tech support time. You could just chat about the weather too. If they hang up call back and talk to someon new.
-
- email nintendo@nintendo whatever. and then every hour thereafter asking for a response to your first email. you could robotmail them but that hurts the net as a whole and you probably will get caught and punnished.
- contact your local nintendo retail store via http://www.nintendo.com/consumer/retail/storeloca
http://www.nintendo.com/cgi-bin/map/store1.html is the list of stores from where I live
http://www.nintendo.com/consumer/retail/onliner
- for the talanted among us hack nintendo.com
- don't submit, have fun
-Any perl wizard want to set up a script that will email each slashdot comment to them and/esp their law firm. I will offer the sending email account if your worried about repercussions for being the mail source. contact me at brainboy@knoggin.com
Yeesh. Did anybody actually look at that FAQ? "I Am The Nintendo FAQ And I Feel That I Have To Capitalize The Beginning Of Every Word". Did like some secretary get assigned this task and got paid double for every letter involving the Shift key or something?
I suppose it shouldn't be any suprise that "the man" is trying to bring down "the little people". Same old story. It's useless now to completely quash it. I mean there are thousands of hotline servers out there, thousands of http and ftp sites with offending materials. I guess the goal is trying to make it less easy. Do I have a problem with that? Well, maybe I should, but I guess I am the upper crust 1% or so that won't freek out when snes9x.com is down. I know to just surf on over elsewhere. My like great grandpapa that read about emulation in Wired or something is going to be bumming and going to give up, so I guess in that sense the Big-N wins.
Signing Off From Capitilization Land - Nintendo Now You Are Playing With Power And The Shift Key.
I'm out
www.jackasscritics.com
Why don't they declare pens, cameras and computers illegal while they're at it?
The site never actually comes out and states that emulators are illegal. It states that they promote piracy and they BELIEVE the UltraHLE emulator is illegal because they BELIEVE it infringes on intellectual copyrights. It's a poor use of logic, but that's why there are two separate questions:
:-)
What is Nintendo's Position on the N64 Emulator, the UltraHLE?
and
Does Nintendo Believe the UltraHLE Violates its Intellectual Property Rights?
Did I just infringe on Nintendo's intellectual property rights by posting their questions?
You are right, words change, language is fluid. Copying and using software illegally is an accepted definition of piracy now. But why piracy? Why not software copiers? Or software thieves? The reason that definition of piracy is in your dictionary is because someone decided to start using the word pirate in that way. It wasn't the "pirates", but the software companies that assigned that definition. It is interesting because the word pirate has implications of breaking the law flagrantly, for pure monetary gain. There is also the sense that violence is used when piracy is committed. This is not to justify the use of software illegally, using ROMs of games in production is stealing from the company that makes the games, it's just that the word piracy bothers me. I think underlying the use of the word is the belief in the sanctity of IP, that even though copying code is essentially cost free each and every use of it should produces hefty royalties. That is a different debate, but I find it troubling that when I buy a M$ joystick, they explicitly tell me that I can only install the driver on a second computer if I delete it from the first. So if I want to use the hardware I own on two of my computers without copying and deleting each time, I am illegally copying software, and M$ can label me a pirate. The ways of propaganda are often subtle.
This is from README.TXT:
= =================
Snes9x: The Portable Super Nintendo Entertainment System Emulator
===============================================
v1.19 30-APR-1999
==================
No, the author does not need to give you consent to copy the game, you have a legal right which can no be taken away by the author or the author's lawyers to make a backup of your game.
As for your original post, I have lost several nintendo cartridges because the contacts or some other part of them got damaged and the game refused to run, they are much more easily damaged than a CD.
From a corporate view, this seems to make some sense. Corporations wish to protect all of their assets, and the technology of their video games is an asset, but here is what interests me from the reading of this FAQ.
Does Nintendo Think Emulation Companies Promote Piracy? Why?
Yes. The only purpose of video game emulators are to play illegal copied games from the Internet.
This is not true. Most of the time the emulator is started by an author who wishes not nescessairly to play "illegal copied games from the internet" but to figure out how the CPU works. I can speak from experience that if I had source code to a fully working N64 emulator my last CPU I had to design for class would have been easier; we had to implement a MIPS cpu with bonus points for new instructions, I only wish I knew what new instructions to add. Its also interesting because I never remember having to agree to a licensing agreement saying I wouldn't reverse engineer my N64 or any of my games.
Haven't the Copyrights for Old Games Expired?
U.S. copyright laws state that copyrights owned by corporations are valid for 75 years from the date of first publication. Because video games have been around for less than three decades, the copyrights of all video games will not expire for many decades to come.
Nintendo may want to check on this, there was a small caveat made in I believe 1993 for software that DOES deal with its commercial exploitability. I realize that most roms sites think the rule is the holy grail (which it isn't) but it does affect this situation. Unfortunately I don't have a link to it right now.
Can Websites and/or Internet Service Providers (ISPs) be Held Liable for Violation of Intellectual Property Rights if they are Only Providing Links to Illegal Software and/or Other Illegal Devices?
Yes. The websites and/or ISPs for sites which link to ROMs, emulators and/or illegal copying devices can be held liable for copyright and trademark violations, regardless of whether the illegal software and/or devices are on their site or whether they are linking to the sites where the illegal items are found.
Nintendo may want to check on this. A person with a web page can be held responsible. But I don't believe that an ISP can nescessarily be held responsible, after all we still have GeoCitites don't we and lord knows how many roms they house (aside: wouldn't it be fun just to browse their hard drive and see all the fun files?)
it might also be worth some time for people to review the article "anarchism triumphant" by Eben Moglen, as some of its principles can be applied to thinking about this area.
My Slashdot account is old enough to drink...
There are no hard and fast rules, but fair use does not ususally include making an entire copy of somthing, rather it allows using excerpts. However, the piece in question has *zero* commercial value, so they really can't collect damages.
I have discovered a truly marvelous sig, unfortunately the sig limit is too small to contain i
Heh, I didn't notice that.
But yeah, maybe they think each question is a title of a work of literature.
The authors of SNES9X said it themselves once, that Silhouette was merely the most recent version of SNES9X at the time, ported and released by John Stiles on the Mac under a different name, so as to avoid entangling the SNES9X team with any legalities (since they had taken a break from releasing public versions, due to some kind of legal trouble or something). It was simply the Mac port of the most recent source that Gary (one of the authors) had on his hard drive.
I laughed aloud when I first read the Silhouette docs, and I even fell for it after a few days of surfing for more info about it, and finding so many people on usenet saying, "Oh yeah, this thing is the real thing!" Heck, Brad Oliver (author of MacMAME) even responded to me personally that he was 99.44% certain that it was not a hacked version of SNES9X. I guess he was right -- it was an actual version of SNES9X.
And magically, the very next version of MacSNES9X pretty much had all the features of Silhouette.
I have thought that nintendo was a shitty company since I was 13. The last nintendo system I bought (or ever plan on buying) is the original NES/Famicom
People joke about how some company like Sun wants to be microsoft but doesn't have the resources.. Nintendo wants to be their own monopoly and doesn'
t care that it turns off 90% the developers to work on PSX(2), they still deal in required exclusive contracts, production deals, etc.
I really hope nintendo burns. I feel very sad that the Sega Saturn did as badly as it did when it was a competitor that could have pushed nintendo under.
-Dave
PS: Cool Fact- Nintendo started out as a playing-card manufacturer
Incorrect. Ever tried using an old Nintendo cartridge? The contacts are usually flaky at best--I'm not sure if this is due to the wear and tear of insertion/removal, oxidation, etc.--but the cartidge becomes unusable after a relatively short amount of time. Now, sometimes it is the console itself, but I've seen several carts that won't work on anyone's system.
I'm also completely baffled by your first paragraph, and, if I understand you correctly, people are underusing an amazing legal tactic--saying it's illegal makes it so!
The authors of SNES9X said it themselves once, that Silhouette was merely the most recent version of SNES9X at the time, ported and released by John Stiles on the Mac under a different name, so as to avoid entangling the SNES9X team with any legalities (since they had taken a break from releasing public versions, due to some kind of legal trouble or something). It was simply the Mac port of the most recent source that Gary (one of the authors) had on his hard drive.
I laughed aloud when I first read the Silhouette docs, and I even fell for it after a few days of surfing for more info about it, and finding so many people on usenet saying, "Oh yeah, this thing is the real thing!" Heck, Brad Oliver (author of MacMAME) even responded to me personally that he was 99.44% certain that it was not a hacked version of SNES9X. I guess he was right -- it was an actual version of SNES9X.
And magically, the very next version of MacSNES9X pretty much had all the features of Silhouette. ^_-
It is still the dark of night.
>Also emulation deals mainly with older products >not with actual ones.
Maybe for some of us, but definately not all. If emulation dealt mainly with older systems (you don't see NOA throwing a hissy over all the NES emulation... yet.), there wouldn't be at least 5 N64 emulators and tons of sites with N64 roms, which is what they're worried about. When they're selling their new console -still- for over US$100
and the games at anywhere from US$50-US$70 a piece, they're growing more and more paranoid.
Why on earth they even care about the SNES anymore, I don't know. I highly doubt they're making that much money off of it. Heck, they don't even bat an eyelash at the VirtualBoy emulators (but then, neither would I).
Hi. You appear to misunderstand IP law.
From : http://www.nintendo.com/corp/faqs/legal.html
:Yes. All ROMs available on the Internet are unauthorized and
:infringing copies of copyrighted works.
This is quite clearly false. There are many ROMs which the copyright
owners have allowed free distribution of.
:An emulator is a software program that is designed to allow game
:play on a platform that it was not created for. The emulator software
:allows for console based or arcade games to be played on personal
:computers. The video games are obtained by downloading illegally copied
^^ Here you seem to have forgotten to put "or downloaded legally from
sites which only have ROMs which are legal to distribute freely"
:software, ROMs, from internet distributors. The ROMs then work with
:the emulator to enable game play on the computer.
:The only purpose of video game emulators are to play illegal
:copied games from the Internet.
This is quite clearly false as well ; I play legally copied games, and
even do some development work using emulators of assorted types.
I'd just like to make it clear I have no problem with you attempting to
enforce IP law, it's just that I object to you claiming blanketly that
emulators/ROMs/etc, are by definition illegal.
Thanks for your time,
Robert.
Going to the emulator creator's ISP and saying, "what this person is doing is illegal, shut down his site" when it isn't illegal is, if not illegal itself, surely unethical. You're right that emulators can be used for playing pirated games. In fact, they're probably used for playing pirated games quite a lot. So what? They're not illegal. Nintendo shouldn't be allowed to get away with these sorts of tactics, they set a very bad precedent. Large companies frequently use their legal muscle in bullying tactics, and it seems to be getting worse all the time.
I might be able to understand Nintendo's concerns about piracy, except that I think they're crazy if they think that they lose a sale every time someone plays a pirated game. I've played lots of games that I didn't own. Not pirated, just borrowed from friends. You can bet that if companies like Nintendo win on things like emulation, they'll be going after people who lend their games to other people next. I'm sure they'd like nothing better than to see that every game is purchased under a non-transferable license that only allows the purchaser to play it.
People aren't picking on them because they're a big company. They started picking on other people. Sure, maybe it's a misguided attempt to protect themselves, but that doesn't make it right.
The problem is that Nintendo, et al considers an old game worthless to them as soon as they can't charge $50 for it in cartridge form. But they still feel the need to enforce their "rights" against piracy, etc.
You can buy SNES and Sega Genesis games at a flea market or a place like FuncoLand for between $1 and $5 a pop, so the games obviously do have some comercial value. Plus people obviously are enjoying the games on the emulator scene.
The easist way for Nintendo to stop 90% of the piracy is to sell ROMS for the old games themselves at $.50 to $1 a pop. Everyone wins: Nintendo gets to make money on their otherwise worthless back catalog and gets essentially free advertising, emulator users can enjoy the games legally, and most ROM Warez sites would probably disappear because their services wouldn't be needed (although if you enjoy piracy, there would be nothing stopping you.)
The only thing that's missing is some sort of Debit system so you wouldn't need to make a credit card transaction for each 50 cent game.
--
Business. Numbers. Money. People. Computer World.
You know, the only use of pens you know is to write threating messages, so those must be bad.
And cameras only purpose is to take pictures of young children for pedophiles!
Computers, doesn't everybody know their the root of all evil? Their an instrument of the devil! (Well, maybe not the devil, but mine's an instrument of some daemons.)
Wasn't there a lawsuit a few months ago when that psx emulator for the mac cam out? Wasn't the outcome as long as the emulator uses its own code it is totally legal? *shrug* I heard this from a co-worker, so maybe it's not true.
That legal information page is an attempt to
create fear and misinformation to get the
rusult they wish.
It is possible for an emulator to be illegal
if the emulator was created by looking at the
original and creating the emulator. If it was
created by looking at the code for the games
and emulating the machine, then it is probably
not illegal.
The article trys to make the reader believe that
if it is possible that an emulator can be illegal,
that is must be so.
A device used to copy the cartriges is not
illegal either. Thats just a junk statement.
Notice they phrase "Does Nintendo believe the
'blah' is illegal? At least they have the sense
not to say it IS illegal.
I guess I should go get out my intellectual
property textbooks, and have a look.
Do you believe everything a company posts?
How about the sign at an automatic car wash?
"Not responsible for damage to autos."
Maybe I should get a gun that says on the side,
"Not responsible for damage caused by bullets."
I can do more than confirm it.
The archival/backup law NEVER EXISTED. It's not a law, folks. In many cases it's an exception granted in many software licenses. It NEVER EVER was a law. Urban legend.
J
http://www.fsf.org/philosophy/right-to-read.html
For now here is Jerremy's (owner of snes9x.com) comment on the situation:
'I just wanted to let everybody know what has happend to Snes9X.COM. According to my host they have shutdown the site because it has illegal content, after contacting my host, they have answered that they have taken offline my site because they have gotten an email from nintendo stating that emulators are illegal.
They are not allowing me access to the site, so until a new host is found, the site is offline ! What Nintendo has mailed to my host is unknown. The only thing I know is that Nintendo was referring to the following page: http://www.nintendo.com/corp/faqs/legal.html. Where they clearly state that their policy is that emulators are illegal, and thus Snes9x is illegal. They probably won't sue me directly since I live in The Netherlands and chances are that they would never be able to win the case !
Jerremy Koot'
Speech is only "free" when it doesn't fall into certian categories like "patently offensive", slander, libel, etc... Images of copyrighted ROMs certianly don't fall under the 1st. An emulator is a little different I guess.
By the same logic, Nintendo is acting within their rights because all they have done is send a letter. Letters are "free speech", right? Maybe someone should ask this guy's hosting company why they chose to shut down the domain. They do run NT so what do you expect???
Trouble is, most of these bleeding-edge hardware companies opt for copywrite protection rather than patent, because the patent process takes so long that by the time the patent would be granted, the hardware is obsolete.
--
Aaron Gaudio
"The fool finds ignorance all around him.
"Every man is a mob, a chain gang of idiots." - Jonathan Nolan, Memento Mori
EmuHQ would have if it were not for the concept on copyright law that allows ``fair use'' of copyrighted works for such uses as review, criticism, or parody.
--jon. Postel is dead. May we all mourn his, and our, loss.
If it can be demonstrated that the only purpose that an emulator could serve is to violate copyright, then possession of the emulator could be illegal. Since, however, there are so many legitimate uses for emulators, the argument falls on its face. For instance, fair use says you're allowed to make one copy for backup purposes. Who's to say that the cartridge isn't the backup copy and the one on your computer is the one that you actually want to use.
"If one is really a superior person, the fact is likely to leak out without too much assistance" -- John Andrew Holmes
You know, the one that extends copyright so long you won't ever see a classic become public domain within your great grandchildren's lifetime, the one that makes a thoughtcrime out of possessing software that could make other illegal-to-possess programs. Anything that could be used to reverse engineer precious intellectual property..
The monkey cage goes into a fit screeching at Microsoft for their attempts at lock-in but don't give a second thought to buying proprietary hardware to buy proprietary games. This is vertical lock-in, folks, what are you going to do if one company does create the ultimate console and the others dry up and blow away? Will anyone ever get back into this market when you feed at the trough of the this console maker, who demands that all games made for it be licensed only to it? Maybe not now, maybe not in a couple years... How about 5? How many new Sega titles do you see now?
Don't just boycott Nintendo, boycott consoles.
I've finally had it: until slashdot gets article moderation, I am not coming back.
There's no source code available for Silhouette; the binary was just dropped in John Stiles (owner of emulation.net)'s lap last fall. The readme refers to a possible 1.1 version at some point, but as yet it hasn't come.
Silhouette was the only emulator around that could handle transparencies at the time.
J.
damned vulpine http://sb.drtwister.com/
I'm surprised nobody seems to have mentioned this so far: With an emulator, I may be able to illegally play pirated games... But I am also able to legally play games which I have purchased, even though I don't own the console system they were designed for.
This is something Nintendo wants to stop, every bit as much as software piracy. It probably hurts their revenues just as much (how many people would pay $200 for a console system that only plays games the $2000 computer they own plays better?), and since it's a completely legitimate practice they can't attack it. I don't own an N64, but if I could get my hands on UltraHLE I'd be happy to borrow a friends Zelda64 cart, download the ROM, and play through it on my computer, deleting the ROM when I'm done. I bet it would look better on a Voodoo 2 than a low-res TV set, too.
The only thing Nintendo can do is change the subject - pretend that because emulators can be used to pirate games, they must only be used to pirate games. Claim that the data on a game cart is somehow an integral part of the cart, not software to be used as the legal owner sees fit. Even claim that their consoles aren't legally computers, and aren't subject to the same rules restricting software licenses.
If I transfer the contents of my hard drive to a faster model, then throw the old drive in the garage, I'm not violating any software licenses. If my old hard drive crashed irreparably and I get copies of my own software from a friend, again I'm doing nothing immoral.
And if I buy a N64 cart, then decide to play it on a quality 3d card/monitor rather than on an N64/grainy TV, even if I never buy an N64 in the first place, that's OK with me. I'm doing nothing wrong, the emulator authors didn't do anything wrong.
The only people in this scenario doing anything close to wrong is the N64 manufacturer attempting to boost sales by artificially maintaining a software lockin.
Does the UltraHLE (or any other emulator) actually include any Nintendo code? If not, it can't violate the copyright. if indeedy it was done in a 'clean room' fashion (hmm...), then this surely is a form of flattery to Nintendo that people liked their game system so much that they were willing to write an emulator to play Nintendo games on their PC. granted, passing around those games would be a copyright violation, but hey...
I don't see how a hypertext link to material on another web site can be illegal, even if that material violates a copyright. A hypertext link is a fact, not a creative work.
What if I printed and distributed a flyer that listed the names and addresses of the best places to buy illegal drugs, child pornography and nuclear weapons?
Is Nintendo going to demand that I stick my head in a wood chipper because I looked at images from a copyrighted video game, thus producing an illegal copy of the images in the neurons of my brain?
Mea navis aericumbens anguillis abundat
Somehow I cannot understand why this shows up here at all. Nintendo hired some people some time ago, invested money into inventing something and now wants to protect its investments.
Looks more like the "I" generation has problems with it is not the centre of the world and the fact not everybody and his brother has to do as "I" want.
Your needs, or what you think are your needs, are not at all the only thing in the world that has to be satisified.
And I was so looking forward to getting a Dolphin eventually, too. However, I'd say it's time to call for a boycott of Nintendo over this. At least until they get it straight that emulators themselves are perfectly legal and stop this crap.
In other words, this means war.
Emulators themselves are not illegal nor is their distribution (unless of course they are retail emulators). The usage of emulators CAN be illegal but is surely not completely illegal. Emulators can be very usefull for developers that are programming for these systems. There is no copyrighted material in the Emulator itself, only in the ROMs it uses. If an Emulator is used for developement purposes is is legal and quite practical I might add. Just my 2 cents =)
EmuHQ may have violated copyright law if they did not get Nintendo's permission for lifting almost the entire FAQ verbatim.
Also (AIUI & IANAL) you can't unfairly restrict other people from using your patent. You can charge royalties, but they have to be reasonable. If Nintendo patents their technology, they have to let the emulator writers use those patents. Words in italics have their meanings determined by a judge.
--
E_NOSIG
In case people do not know, SNES9x is a brilliant super Nintendo emulator that even runs on Linux. It plays games such as Super Mario World and *way* more almost flawlessly. Full screen. With sound.
All drugs say "Consult a physician". Did you for an asparin or an antacid or a cough drop?
Playland at McDonalds says "not responsible for injury"
Software says essentially, "not responsible for anything"
Just for fun I called the EPA (Environmental Protection Agency in the US) and was unable to get anyone to officially say it was permitted to discharge a can of spraypaint into the atmosphere (I wanted to paint my bike).
Laws and laywers are creating a paranoid litigous society.
Did anyone ever see that early Sliders episode where they ended up in "lawyer world". You know; where the fast food guy won't sell you a burger and fries without notarized certification from your physician that your cholestorol is below x. Are we really that far away from such a society?
Lets get back to the base, where the roms that are used. If anyone takes the time to read that 1 page in or near the back of every Nintendo manual, it states that you WARRENTY (nothing else) is VOID if you use a rom copier and do any type of mod to the console system. It only states that copying a game is illegal.
And come on people, Nintendo games are `carts` they can not easily be damaged like CDs, meaning there is NO NEED what so ever for a back-up. if the cart if damaged it can only be your fault or by negligence.
This part of the FAQ:
"It is well established by judicial decisions in the United States that this limited exception does not apply to game data contained in ROM semiconductor chips in video game cartridges."
So all you have to do is put stuff on ROM media to prevent the backup clause? Or is it only ROM semiconductors? Seems awfully arbitrary to me.
From previous post:
>. I have several legal ROMs, such as the pong >demo written for the n64, and several original >n64 and snes games available either as freeware >or public domain software. These ROMs are not >illegal.
This would seem to imply that contrary to Nintendo's claim, there are legal uses for the equipment.
>without providing solutions that will appease >both parties
Well the point is, is that claiming that equipment is illegal just because it is possible to use for some illegal purposes does not seem to be have any basis in the law.
Secondly, as I see it the point isn't what is fair, but who I would want to deal with. If Nintendo doesn't care about it's customers, their customers won't car about them.
This would be the same for someone who "wasn't such a big game vendor, but just a programmer somewhere who makes mighty good console games". If they were more interested in limiting my use of there games to a platform (N64) on which I did not wish to use, then I would not buy that game.
There are many vendors. It is there job to satisfy me. If they don't I won't buy their products.
Fairly simple, really.
We use GNU/SunOS.
Xerox Copiers are not illegal.
Copiers are used for the sole purpose of creating an exact copy of another peice of paper.
You can say that Xerox copier encourage piracy of copyrighted material.
However, you can't say that copiers are illegal because of whatever purpose they may be used for. "Possible Intent" has no bearing on the legality of any product......
Game copying devices have no legal purpose.
They'd sure like us to believe this, but I don't believe anyone can really be that stupid. Hence I suspect the above post of being astroturf. They don't explicitly make this statement on their page, probably because they know it's abusing the truth more than they can get away with, but they try to make it seem implicit.
What am I talking about? They state that "Game copying devices have no legal purpose..." Blah, blah, blah, "internet", blah, blah, blah, "illegal". However, they don't even explicitly claim that the devices have no other purpose, only that they have this "illegal" purpose. They completely ignore the backup/archival copy rule in connection to these devices, i.e., the fact that you might use the device (exclusively) to make your archival copy. They are probably hoping that what they said earlier (regarding downloading ROMs of games you already own) would carry over to this, but there is a difference. In this case, you really would be making a copy for yourself alone, from the physical medium that you own, rather than simply using the rule to justify making a bootleg copy from someone else's original.
They would certainly like us to believe that there's no difference, and IANAL, but they could hardly be dumb enough to have neglected to say it, if they really believe it's true. It seems more likely that they didn't think they could get away with it.
Even if this distinction doesn't do the trick, I for one have a serious problem with the very concept that a device can be illegal simply because it can be used for an illegal purpose. It's not illegal to be capable of doing something illegal, only to actually do it. See Richard Stallman's article "The Right to Read" (which, I see, someone else has also posted a link to a bit further down) for more on where that can lead. It's a very slippery, and very dangerous, slope.
All in all, I'm sorry to say, I am very disappointed at Nintendo's attitude. Even if their position is legally defensible, it is certainly not morally so. (Notice that they keep saying "it's illegal", but they don't really say "it's wrong." The closest they come is whining about how it costs them revenue, but that only makes it wrong if you buy their hidden premise that they are morally entitled to that revenue.) I don't think I can in good conscience buy any more of their products as long as they keep this up. I was probably going to buy a Nintendo 64 just for the new Zelda game, and I've been drooling like everyone else over the specs for their next system, but now I doubt I'll be able to bring myself to buy anything from them.
David Gould
David Gould
main(i){putchar(340056100>>(i-1)*5&31|!!(i<6)<< 6)&&main(++i);}
The case hasn't proceeded much; all that's happened is that the judge has refused to grant Sony's request for a preliminary injunction against the distribution of the VGS. If you want some precedent in the realm of emulators, go and look at this. It discusses cases like Sega v Accolade.
"If one is really a superior person, the fact is likely to leak out without too much assistance" -- John Andrew Holmes
Didn't Sony sue one or more emulator companies trying to prevent them from selling their emulators? I wouldn't classify that as "not giving a crap about emulators."
"Second they should understand the full meaning of open source. The fact that anyone with the brain to let the lawn mower rot and get coding and read and learn can produce large scale software projects should remind Nintendo, Sony, M$, and the rest of the world that code is a natural or rather infinite virtual resource. The hierarchy is false and artificial. Enough inforacketeering already."
That's not true; code is not an infinite virtual resource. It takes people to write it. And although it's cool and noble to pretend we live in a Star Trek universe, where money doesn't matter, it DOES. People need money to buy things they need to live, and things they want to be happy and content. What would you have these freedom-coders pay for their computer with? Promises to create free programs? Idealism is great, just don't let it get out of hand, please.
"Third Piracy my ass. No one ambushed a Nintendo distributors shipment to steal the consoles kill the driver and burn the truck.. Wake up. "
Wow, this is the second time I've seen this argument today. So either you wrote both articles, or this is spreading around for some reason.
When someone says, "look at that gay man over there," do you immediately think they're talking about a homosexual man, or a happy man? That's right, the word gay has changed in the vernacular to mean homosexual. Sure, if a really old person says the word, you might think twice.
Now here comes "piracy." Yeah, it used to mean one-eyed pirates with swords and swashbuckles. And what did pirates do? They stole treasures and property out on the high seas. Pirates do still exist today, just like happy men, but when you hear someone refer to software piracy, you know what they mean. They stole the software.
Lo-and-behold, this definition is available in most dictionaries. Now, I know there are no Dictionary ROM's available, but go down to the library and pick one up when you get a chance. You might find out that piracy also means, "the unauthorized reproduction or use of copyrighted material, a patented invention, etc." (Random House Webster's Dictionary).
-WW
Although I'm not a lawyer, I think that actually nearly every emulator is completely legal, the recent disposition of a EEUU tribunal declaring software as a language and thus protected by the free speech amend of the constitution takes down avery other legal argument. Also Nintendo is a big Sucker that only wants you to pay the highest price for a game, if they suffer from high piracy they better lower their prices; In spain there's a gaming company that has a very low piracy index, why? all the games sold by them are at 25$ or less, at this price I reather buy their game tahn copy. Also emulation deals mainly with older products not with actual ones.
:)
"If one is really a superior person, the fact is likely to leak out without too much assistance" -- John Andrew Holmes
Seriously, email nintendo@nintendo.com and express your disgust at this matter. In this age of mass communication, the consumer finally has a way to get through to the corporations... use it!
It's not so open and shut as "emulators are legal, period."
Where did Nintendo say they were illegal? I read the same FAQ you did, and I don't see that anywhere. They did say they believe UltraHLE was illegal, and I remember this was because they said they had reason to believe the authors referred to the N64 software to create their EMU.
You're right, emulators are perfectly legal... but only if they are designed in a clean room, where none of the authors have seen the code for the software they are emulating. Some emulator authors have worked in clean room situations. Did the UltraHLE authors do this? I don't know, but Nintendo does not believe so. Have they proved it in a court of law yet? I don't think so.
Not quite correct.
In order to run on the Nintendo platform, you need to have some code that identifies the cartridge as "Nintendo-approved." Atari chose a rather nefarious way of discovering this code sequence: They wrote to the US Copyright office, claimed they were in litigation with Nintendo and, as part of their discovery process, requested a copy of the "code in dispute". The copyright office sent them a listing of Nintendo's authentication code. Atari incorporated into their cart and published it.
Nintendo sues, claiming infringement of "intellectual property" rights. The court ruled against Atari. However, the court went to great lengths to state that its decision was based on Atari's fraudulent behavior, not because of reverse-engineering. Indeed, the court went on to explain that reverse engineering is fair use. This decision is outlined here.
There is also another detailed paper on the subject of reverse engineering, and "lock-out" processes in particular. I haven't read through it completely yet, but it does point out that many of the questions surrounding the legitimacy of reverse-engineering remain unanswered by the courts.
In short, Nintendo is throwing its weight around, trying to bully people into submission. I wouldn't buy into it. A polite note should also be sent to the ISP in question, informing them that Nintendo's legal claims are dubious, at best.
Schwab
Editor, A1-AAA AmeriCaptions
Cheers,
Joshua.
--jon. Postel is dead. May we all mourn his, and our, loss.
If the damm game makers would port to Linux they woudl not have this problem, and they would make more money. Emulation is reverse engineering. I don't theink that they can say that ALL ROMS on the internet are illegal. If I created one on my machine, and posted it on the internet it would be legal. It looks like a deterrant method to stop the NES emulatin project. They fear that it may get ported to another platform. I think that they would have a tough case, unless the emulaion progream uses patented / copywrighted or a trademark .
Only 'flamers' flame!
Does anyone else remember snes9x vanishing after v .24 or so? Apparently the story on that was that they had gotten offered to have that for commercial sale, but Nintendo stepped in and said "Okay, you can do this if you sign this document that says you've done all these illegal things that we can promptly sue every cell on your body into bankruptcy." Sickening.
/need/ to. All they have to do is threaten legal action to cause this sort of chaos. Since law pre-court tends to veer towards whoever has the more money, Nintendo doesn't really even have to win.
It's really too bad. It's fairly obvious they won't listen to either the law or a small faction of emulation users on this case. (Sorry, most people have never even heard of them..) And the simple fact is that they don't
Oh well. I doubt coding will stop on it just because of this, just releases. As soon as they're capable of doing so again... I should have bugged Gary about the one bug I found in the 3dfx version.(Try running SD3 in 3dfx TV mode. Funnier than hell, if unplayable.)
-- Patrick McCarthy, who still has yet to get an account.
Nintendo, the International Drunken Sailors Association, and the Euro-Nazi-IDSA need to get out.
Sony doesn't give a crap about the emulators. They said they make little money from consoles. They make their money from licensing the libraries used to make games. Since BSD, Linux, etc userc get their gcc glibc libeverything should M$ or Borland/Inprise/Borland or cygnus kill them because itr gives people the capability to produce software?
Second they should understand the full meaning of open source. The fact that anyone with the brain to let the lawn mower rot and get coding and read and learn can produce large scale software projects should remind Nintendo, Sony, M$, and the rest of the world that code is a natural or rather infinite virtual resource. The hierarchy is false and artificial. Enough inforacketeering already.
Third Piracy my ass. No one ambushed a Nintendo distributors shipment to steal the consoles kill the driver and burn the truck.. Wake up.
And remind ZDNET CNN MSCNNNBCABC that there's important things than the fucking Clinton/Monica story that Littleton was a tragedy caused by two spoiled smart non-geek brats, that news stations should be held responsible for opening a channel for copycats, tthat school administrators have a responsibility to stay above paranoia, and that the ratings system has made news reporting a farce.
The ship sank. Get over it. (This sig was cut out from another's shirt and painstakingly hand-posted)
Look at Sega. They made a deal with the author of KGen and now are selling three packs of Genesis classics with a copy of the emulator
Head over to http://www.dextrose.com/ and learn everything you want to know about developing for the n64.
Famous Last Words:
Emulators SHOULDN'T be illegal - running stolen ROM images on them is - I wish the gove would stop transgressing our liberties to enforce unenforcable laws.
Chuck
try { do() || do_not(); } catch (JediException err) { yoda(err); }