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Nintendo Piracy The Almighty Buck The Courts The Internet

Nintendo To ROM Sites: Forget Cease-and-Desist, Now We're Suing (arstechnica.com) 296

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica: Nintendo's attitude toward ROM releases -- either original games' files or fan-made edits -- has often erred on the side of litigiousness. But in most cases, the game producer has settled on cease-and-desist orders or DMCA claims to protect its IP. This week saw the company grow bolder with its legal action, as Nintendo of America filed a lawsuit (PDF) on Thursday seeking millions in damages over classic games' files being served via websites. The Arizona suit, as reported by TorrentFreak, alleges "brazen and mass-scale infringement of Nintendo's intellectual property rights" by the sites LoveROMs and LoveRetro. These sites combine ROM downloads and in-browser emulators to deliver one-stop gaming access, and the lawsuit includes screenshots and interface explanations to demonstrate exactly how the sites' users can gain access to "thousands of [Nintendo] video games, related copyrighted works, and images." The biggest amount of money Nintendo is seeking comes from "$150,000 for the infringement of each Nintendo copyrighted work and up to $2,000,000 for the infringement of each Nintendo trademark." The company has also requested full disclosure of the operators' "receipts and disbursements, profit and loss statements, advertising revenue, donations and cryptocurrency revenue, and other financial materials."

LoveROMs has since removed all Nintendo-affiliated links, including ROMs and emulators, and the site announced on its social media channels that "all Nintendo titles have been removed from our site." Meanwhile, LoveRetro.co now redirects visitors to a page that reads: "Loveretro has effectively been shut down until further notice."
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Nintendo To ROM Sites: Forget Cease-and-Desist, Now We're Suing

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  • by nwaack ( 3482871 ) on Monday July 23, 2018 @03:49PM (#56996704)
    1. Sue websites for hosting 30 year old games
    2. Anger customers
    3. ???
    4. Profit!!!
    • It is even worse then that.

      Post a "Let's Play" of a current game on YouTube? Nintendo likes to pretend they own it.

      Who knew that they would be against FREE ADVERTISING ???

      *facepalm*

      How about digitally SELLING these old games so people don't have to download them in the first place???

      Piracy is NOT a distribution problem -- it is a marketing problem.

      Fuck Nintendo's draconian, archaic, position.

      • How about digitally SELLING these old games so people don't have to download them in the first place???

        Depends on which of "these" games you're talking about. They do (at least as of the Wii and WiiU; I don't own a Switch yet) sell many old games as Virtual Console downloads.

      • Comment removed based on user account deletion
      • by GNious ( 953874 )

        It is even worse then that.

        Post a "Let's Play" of a current game on YouTube? Nintendo likes to pretend they own it.

        Who knew that they would be against FREE ADVERTISING ???

        *facepalm*

        We do a monthly "Upcoming Games" segment - due to Nintendo's antics, have asked the hosts to NOT cover their games since it'll get us hit with (C) claims the moment we include any footage.

    • > 2. Anger customers

      Customers are people who buy things. People who are downloading roms for free off a 3rd party site are by definition not engaging in a business-customer relationship with Nintendo, they are doing literally the opposite.

      That said, I do think that like Gabe Newell of Valve famously said, "Piracy is almost always a service problem, not a pricing problem". The same holds true here. As long as Nintendo doesn't service the ability to easily get that experience on equipment people have or

      • Customers are people who buy things. People who are downloading roms for free off a 3rd party site are by definition not engaging in a business-customer relationship with Nintendo, they are doing literally the opposite.

        The two aren't necessarily mutually exclusive.

  • If anyone thinks this has to do with any thing other than cashing in on selling people the same games that they have already paid for multiple times as a virtual console cash grab, they are morons.

    • There's clearly still a demand. And the used games market has dried up because piracy is much simpler.

      • by tlhIngan ( 30335 )

        There's clearly still a demand. And the used games market has dried up because piracy is much simpler.

        The demand is obvious, given the Nintendo NES Classic re-release (after that disasterous launch in 2006). Sure you can probably build a cheaper one, but again, Nintendo's version has all the ROMs licensed properly.

        (And Nintendo didn't see Sega and Atari screwed themselves when they sold their stuff to AT Games, which is why those retro consoles never sold well - they may say 1000 games on the box, but it's

      • used games are far from dried up. game stop brought them back ebay prices have gone threw threw the roof.
  • by eepok ( 545733 ) on Monday July 23, 2018 @04:13PM (#56996864) Homepage

    While I fully acknowledge and support an owner's copyrights, I also believe that in absence of clear, genuine use or capitalization upon a particular copyright, certain IP should enter the a "semi-public" domain wherein limited duration licensing to those copyrights may be sold on behalf of the holder.

    Example: If Nintendo is still making money on "Pokemon" in general, good for them. However, if they don't find it financially viable to re-make the original GameBoy Pokemon games and thus choose not to make them available on modern platforms, people should be able to pay a fair value semi-public domain license to replicate or acquire those games for use on any platform. The license could be limited (1 year) and affordable ($2/year) with at least 50% of that licensing going to Nintendo with the remaining going to support this semi-public domain licensing system.

    This would be better for everyone. Nintendo doesn't have to ramp up their lawyer pool to squeeze blood from stones (users and distributors of emulators and games) and those "stones" could pay their share in small amounts. Nintendo continues get to get paid and retain control while users get their games and don't get dragged to court.

    The same could be done for books no longer in print (I have a couple I'd like to replace but cannot find anywhere) and movies that haven't made the transition to digital media. Hell, I'd happily pay a flat $0.50/DVD to be able to rip them and store them for my own convenient watching while being 100% certain that I can never be sued for having done so (instead of having to argue fair use in court).

    • Copyright that is 95 years from the first publication in the case of a corporation that contracts that work. I think that should have a requirement that it's still being published or if it's not published for a certain amount of time then it should fall into the public domain.

      Nintendo does have the SNES & NES Classic Edition so I'm not surprised they are trying to protect their copyrights.

      I think them releasing those are a direct response to retro pi and the raspberry pi cases and usb controller that lo

      • Whether or not the titles were under copyright, people would still buy the retro consoles from Nintendo.

      • by Jason Levine ( 196982 ) on Tuesday July 24, 2018 @09:37AM (#57000408) Homepage

        Copyright should go back to 14 years plus an additional optional 14 year extension. Let's use the original Legend of Zelda as a reference. It was originally released in 1986, so the first copyright period would have elapsed in 2000. Nintendo would have obviously renewed it so it would then have been copyrighted until 2014. This doesn't mean that all future Zelda games would be fair game, but it would mean that people could distribute the original Legend of Zelda ROM freely. Nintendo would have had 28 years to make money off of the game. Plenty of time.

        In addition, this would help with orphaned works. Suppose there was a great game for the NES that you loved playing. You want to play it in an emulator but want to stay on the completely legal side of the law. Unfortunately, in the time since its release and today, the company was sold, split up, bankrupted, bought again, etc. Now nobody seems to know WHO owns the rights to the game. The original code might even have been deleted at some point so even the proper rights holder might not have it.

        With current copyright laws in place (and using 1985 as the release date), it could fall into Public Domain somewhere between 2080 and 2105. This would be a death sentence for any orphaned work. They'll vanish before then. With 14+14, you'd be able to freely copy the game in 2013 (even assuming the copyright was renewed). Orphaned works could be saved.

        Of course, this would "hurt" businesses who rely on locking things up under copyright essentially forever. They'd use all of their legal muscle to oppose any return to 14+14.

  • People already played all the old games and downloaded all the roms.
    Now we want VR games.

  • They have become a blight on the gaming community and are very big copyright maximalists.

    If you care about the gaming economy, stop buying Nintendo.

  • counter sue for useing ines headers in there own emus.

    They benefit from the free workload of the people doing the emulator work but want to shut them down and force people to use there own emulators that do less then the free ones.

  • What about being able to just buy the roms?
    So you can use your own emulator or use an flash cart on real hardware?

  • I assume Nintendo is preparing to release some online switch store where you can get a rotation of games for a membership like PSN and XBOX does or you can directly purchase access to old games.

    As such, they are getting rid of any low hanging fruit before release now that these rom sites are possibly costing them money.

  • "Old Nintendo games" and "Nintendo copyrighted works" are not the same thing.
    If your NES or SNES rom was not published or developed by Nintendo then Nintendo has no issue with you.
    The company that did publish it might care if its still in business but its not Nintendo's problem. Notice
    the sites they are suing are making money off their IP and trademarks.

     

  • What did they expect? Nintendo is actively engaged in these old games' sales with the retro / mini units. Obviously a lot more people would be buying the units if free ROM downloads didn't exist. It's just business. They didn't seem to care much for years before the units came out.

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