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  1. Officiall comments by Alex Kampl / Lik Sang Intl. on Nintendo Wins Lik Sang Piracy Case · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I hope with the following Information I am able to give you a little insight into the recent
    happenings and about the misleading press release of Nintendo.

    Before the Nintendo Press release has been distributed, I have delivered a Notice of
    Appeal to Nintendo, as well as to the High Court of Hong Kong. I am not exactly sure
    why Nintendoâ(TM)s press department didnâ(TM)t mention a word about it.
    The Judgment was not a real trial yet, it was a Summary Judgment with a single Judge.
    Usually such Summary Judgments are in case of bounced bank checks where no trial is
    needed and everything is straight forward.

    With all due respect to the High Court of Hong Kong, but no Intellectual Property (IP)
    specialist was assigned to this case. Already at the first hearing the Judge mentioned that
    itâ(TM)s a pity Hong Kong has no IP specialist anymore and that he finds the Copyright Law
    of Hong Kong very confusing. After some research, it looks like the Judge is a specialist
    for maritime laws. He made several comments during the hearings which seemed to
    observers like this was his first IP case ever.

    The Summary Judgment itself was based on the Section 273 of the Hong Kong Copyright
    Ordinance about âoecircumventing a copy-protectionâ. No copy-protection exists in the
    Gameboy or Gameboy Advance game cartridges. The Judge didnâ(TM)t hear a specialist or at
    least an independent 3rd party expert opinion - he took it for granted from the
    explanations by Nintendo that there is a copy-protection.

    Furthermore, the Judge found that âoeby analogy with drugs, it[the setcion 273] is not
    aimed at the drug addict but at the drug traffickerâ. I fail to understand his logic, as this
    would mean that the drug store selling the injection needles to drug addicts or maybe
    even the manufacturer of the container where the drug addict keeps the drug could be
    held liable?

    After legal actions in the USA against Bung Enterprises in the late nineties (for selling
    and manufacturing videogame development and backup equipment) this was the second
    Court Judgment ever regarding products of this nature. Regarding information made
    available to me in the Court Room, the case against Bung and its US distributor Carl
    Industries Inc was brought to an end in their disfavor by Bung not complying with Court
    Orders and not paying ordered penalties. The actual judgment was written by Nintendo
    representatives, without the Judge properly going through the arguments. The legality or
    illegality of the products in question has therefore never been argued in a real trial
    anywhere in the world. A serious trial, with competent Judges, is now definitely needed
    to settle the question once and for all. This is why I have decided to appeal.

    I am not happy about the direction where this is heading, neither are supporters and
    legitimate users of the tools. Again, I have to stress once more, that the very same
    hardware under attack is used by thousands of hobbyist users and even professional
    developers for legitimate purpose. Very embarrassing for Nintendo: even the large
    publisher, who made the original game used in Court for demonstrating purpose, bought
    hundreds and hundreds of Flash Cartridges from my company for beta testing. And so did
    numerous other top 10 publishers listed in the stock market.

    The products I have sold are not circumventing any copy protections, same as a Floppy
    Disk Drive and a 3.5" Disk doesn't â" in fact there is no copy-protection existing, as
    commonly known by the gaming industry.

    I completely understand Nintendoâ(TM)s fight against piracy, but I believe they are aiming at
    the wrong targets. With Digital Media and the Internet nowadays, publishers will have to
    change their strategy. They just canâ(TM)t win the fight against the Progress without removing
    our primary rights: presumption of innocence and the right for backup. Nintendo doesnâ(TM)t
    need to prove you are a pirate anymore, it is assumed you all are if you have the technical
    means to copy.