ESA Praises Sting of Game Software Pirates 50
Next Generation reports on the arrest of 19 software pirates in Chicago. The ESA sent along their congratulations to federal law enforcement officers, who took down the warez dealers as part of a task force titled 'Opereration Site Down'. From the article: "The international piracy warez group known as 'RISCISO' reportedly pirated $6.5 million worth of games, software and movies since it began operations in 1998. The group maintained several servers that contained 23,000 CD ROMs worth of pirated material, according to the ESA."
The more you tighten your grip... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:The more you tighten your grip... (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:The more you tighten your grip... (Score:1)
But getting money from selling copyrighted data is not like everyone else.
I get paid by the hour, like most people. Basically, I'm selling some of my time to my employer. If you sell software or music/movies, your salary is not a function the amount work you've done but for the number of people willing to buy the result of that work.
Re:The more you tighten your grip... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:The more you tighten your grip... (Score:2)
-h-
Re:The more you tighten your grip... (Score:2)
Now the headline makes sense (Score:2)
Wow, this guy can do it all! (Score:2)
Re:I don't get it (Score:2)
The bigger question, though, is a how a post like that got modded "Informative"?
Re:I don't get it (Score:1)
My comment was meant to point out that I (and I suspect most people) haven't heard of this 'other' ESA and that maybe the post should have mentioned this article is not about the European Space Agency.
Flying Spaghetti Monster will NOT be pleased (Score:4, Funny)
Now we are in negative figures just watch as global average temperature become uncontrollable.
Repent your sins.
The end of the world is nigh.
http://www.venganza.org/ [venganza.org]
Re:Flying Spaghetti Monster will NOT be pleased (Score:1)
Re:Flying Spaghetti Monster will NOT be pleased (Score:2)
Cannot compute (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Cannot compute (Score:1)
14.9TB of data
Re:Cannot compute (Score:2)
Re:Cannot compute (Score:1)
Re:Cannot compute (Score:3, Informative)
700mb * 23000 = 16.1TB
so it's approximately 1.61 times the Library of Congress
Re:Cannot compute (Score:2, Funny)
A Real Link and an unanswered Question (Score:2)
Wonder - the article seems to suggests these were not terrorists but it isn't clearly addressed.
Never heard of the group (Score:5, Interesting)
Even those Usenet groups are dying down. The last time there was a sting, the volume of posting dropped from about 25 titles a day to about 10 titles a day. About 2 months ago, it dropped again, to about 2-3 titles a day it seems. This is probably why.
Even without those types of pirates, I think you will be seeing a lot of software stop being pirated. The more titles require on-line play with servers to connect to, the easier for the software companies to make sure there is a digital handshake that would be hard to get around.
Besides, you see a lot of the software companies releasing games that have major bugs in them, requiring a patch that has to be downloaded. I am suspecting that this is one of their methods to defeat the ISO type pirates. Sure, someone can download their game. However, it is basically a free demo that will crap out on you about 5 hours into gameplay due to a major bug. In order to fix said bug, you have to download the patch, which re-installs whatever copy protection the ISO type pirates removed. A simple process, but effective.
Secure-ROM 7 apparently also seeks out such programs as Daemon Tools and refuses to let the application run if it is installed. Even people using stuff like Blind Write and other tools that try to hide applications like Daemon Tools are failing to mask their usage.
Personally, I am kind of tired of the pirated software stuff. The software companies are going to harder and harder methods of protection, and it can and does catch paying customers in their path.
I own a copy of Atari's "Dungeons & Dragnons: The Temple of Elemental Evil". I had played it when it first came out, and not really played it again. I had used Daemon Tools to hold an image of the original CD 1, so I didn't have to swap so much. (I'm an admitted game junkie, and I'm tired of swappings CDs when I want to play Half-Life 2, as opposed to Sacred, as opposed to NWN, etc.) A HD crash more than a year later wiped the CD image out. When I went to re-install, there was a new patch to put in, so I installed it when I loaded the game again. The problem is, they added new protection in the latest patch, and said protection told me that my original game CD was not valid. Calls to Atari were a joke. They refused to fix it because when they asked for a diagnostic to be run, it identified that Daemon Tools was found in the registry. Even uninstalling it, they refused to help. I offered to mail them the original game box first, and they could return me a new box with new CDs. No dice.
Many game companies are offering free demos of products available to download from places like fileplanet. So, there is no need to pull a full cd image from some place that is going to require a patch that will re-enforce the pirate's efforts, anyways. But, people that buy the games can suffer, and find their software is ruined years later by a patch the are supposed to need.
Personally, I think half of the patches for Blizzard's Diablo II: Lord of Destruction that have been done over the years is to reinforce copy protection.
Re:Never heard of the group (Score:2)
Re:Never heard of the group (Score:2)
Re:Never heard of the group (Score:2)
I totally agree. When I tried to run Doom 3 for the first time it had the nerve to tell me it wouldn't run due to my cd emulat
Re:Never heard of the group (Score:2)
For Half-Life 2 if you registered your CD with a steam account you don't need the CD check. Just uninstall the game. Redownload using Steam. I bought all my Valve games with the CD but I never have to whip out the CDs anymore. Totally love Steam. I hope more companies do something similar.
Easiest workaround... (Score:1)
Oh, and no, I didn't pirate the game. I got a copy from my brother whose computer couldn't run it properly (he h
Re:Never heard of the group (Score:5, Interesting)
If you think that's bad, you should have seen Homeworld: Cataclysm [wikipedia.org]. It came with a "Copy Protection" scheme that did the following: If there's a CD-Writer installed on the system, don't run the game. Do not print a useful error message.
I had to call up support (I *hate* calling support) to find out what the problem was. The only way to play the game is to replace your CDRW drive with a CDROM (!) or download an unofficial crack to "fix" the issue.
I don't know what Sierra/Barking Dog Studios was thinking, but it couldn't have been a very complex thought. Nearly every system released on the market has a CD Burner installed! The return rates on the game must have been incredible!
Corporate stupidity. Bah, humbug.
Re:Never heard of the group (Score:2)
That would be exactly why you didn't see it. The NOCD crack was what I was referring to as the "Unofficial crack". If you read the description of the crack, you'll find that it removes the copy protection from the program. (Which is CD based. SecuROM, if I'm not mistaken.)
Homeworld Cataclysm (Score:2)
Re:Homeworld Cataclysm (Score:2)
Most of the time, when a game has been out long enough to hit the bargain bin, it is no longer version 1.0. It is 1.3 or something. So, there are no patches, and if the patch fixed the problem, viola.
I'm not saying that IS the reason, but it is possible.
Re:Never heard of the group (Score:1)
Re:Never heard of the group (Score:2)
You do always have the choice of taken them to small claims court for deceptive marketing practices. Since they sell globally and have a 1-800 number they have to come to your city/town/whatever's courthouse to defend themselves. When they don't - you can place a lien on their business. This stops them from getting any new loans from a bank until the lien
makes me wonder.. (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:makes me wonder.. (Score:2)
This ESA = Entertainment Software Association (Score:5, Informative)
Strange that the articles doesn't say, as most of us probably think of ESA as European Space Agency [wikipedia.org]
Re:This ESA = Entertainment Software Association (Score:4, Informative)
Re:This ESA = Entertainment Software Association (Score:1)
WTF? I thought most Slashdotters were American. I don't even know that acronym.
In case people think this is familiar (Score:2)
The joke is on you. (Score:2)
Going for mere peanuts (Score:2)
Wow (Score:3, Funny)
This reminds me of(in Clerks) when Randall kicked out some customer out of the video store and Jay goes "YEAH!@#". Ie he contributed absolutely nothing. Rhetorical!