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Nintendo Piracy The Almighty Buck The Internet Games Technology

Couple Who Ran ROM Site To Pay Nintendo $12 Million (vice.com) 160

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Motherboard: Nintendo has won a lawsuit seeking to take two large retro-game ROM sites offline, on charges of copyright infringement. The judgement, made public today, ruled in Nintendo's favor and states that the owners of the sites LoveROMS.com and LoveRETRO.co, will have to pay a total settlement of $12 million to Nintendo. The complaint was originally filed by the company in an Arizona federal court in July, and has since lead to a swift purge of self-censorship by popular retro and emulator ROM sites, who have feared they may be sued by Nintendo as well.

LoveROMS.com and LoveRETRO.co were the joint property of couple Jacob and Cristian Mathias, before Nintendo sued them for what they have called "brazen and mass-scale infringement of Nintendo's intellectual property rights." The suit never went to court; instead, the couple sought to settle after accepting the charge of direct and indirect copyright infringement. TorrentFreak reports that a permanent injunction, prohibiting them from using, sharing, or distributing Nintendo ROMs or other materials again in the future, has been included in the settlement. Additionally all games, game files, and emulators previously on the site and in their custody must be handed over to the Japanese game developer, along with a $12.23 million settlement figure. It is unlikely, as TorrentFreak have reported, that the couple will be obligated to pay the full figure; a smaller settlement has likely been negotiated in private.

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Couple Who Ran ROM Site To Pay Nintendo $12 Million

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  • by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday November 13, 2018 @07:18PM (#57639852)

    Copyrights are now hijacking cultural history. If you're not actively selling the material to for some reasonable period (10 years) then the copyright should go to the public domain.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      It's really unreasonable when the consoles necessary to run these games themselves are now considered obsolete, not just nintendoware

    • Copyrights are now hijacking cultural history. If you're not actively selling the material to for some reasonable period (10 years) then the copyright should go to the public domain.

      I would agree with you if I didn't just buy a whole lot of original 30 year old games from Nintendo's store to play on the Switch.

  • may need some chapter 11 and 7 to get out of that no way that there sites made that much.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    The internet used to be so much better.

  • by silverkniveshotmail. ( 713965 ) on Tuesday November 13, 2018 @07:45PM (#57639974) Journal
    They won't pay anything near $12M.
  • by duke_cheetah2003 ( 862933 ) on Tuesday November 13, 2018 @08:08PM (#57640048) Homepage

    I imagine that smaller settlement includes a declaration of bankruptcy by the couple. What else could one do in such a situation?

  • Faxanadu coming soon to Switch Online. :-D

  • by Morgaine ( 4316 ) on Tuesday November 13, 2018 @09:15PM (#57640338)

    The message that Nintendo is sending fans seems clear. Don't use, buy, play or in any other way invest your time or money in Nintendo, as their only interest is in bleeding you dry by whatever means they can. As a company they are signaling that they have neither social insight nor ethics, and do not treat fans as assets nor as free publicity.

    Message received and understood, so I'm adding Nintendo to my short boycott list. It's just a personal statement and of course will have no effect on Nintendo individually, but I doubt that I will be the only one making such a decision. Evil deeds and blind corporate greed should not go unpunished. Conversely, competitors now gain an extra chance.

    My poor Wii will never have a brother or a sister.

    • Re: (Score:1, Insightful)

      by Cmdln Daco ( 1183119 )

      If all you have is a Wii, you were never a real Nintendo customer. That's just a mainstream console that 'everybody was buying.'

    • Conversely, competitors now gain an extra chance.

      Does this include competitors making indie games for Nintendo's older consoles, such as Haunted: Halloween '86 (The Curse of Possum Hollow) [youtube.com] and Micro Mages [youtube.com]?

    • by ledow ( 319597 )

      I would have thought it was clearly than that - please don't keep giving away the stuff we own that we're still selling because it's quite blatantly illegal and we hardly even need to present evidence to prove that in a court of law.

      That's ALWAYS been the case. You think this is something new? ROM sites were being shut down every day as far back as the 90's, because THEY ARE ILLEGAL.

      All the "abandonware", "well, it's free advertising for their brands" etc. arguments were primitive attempts to justify whol

      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        by Anonymous Coward

        A site hosting hundreds of thousands of ROMs is a requirement for that guy to be able to go online and download the one he has a partial-legal right to. Sounds like you made use of such sites yourself. Why is it that people who speak out for something are often the ones engaging in it?

        Copyright was supposed to be for a limited time. In an age without internet, fast cars, or easy distribution, that limited time was 14 years. If anything copyright should be shorter now than then. It isn't. Currently cop

    • The message that Nintendo is sending fans seems clear. Don't use, buy, play or in any other way invest your time or money in Nintendo

      Actually the message they are sending is that they don't abandon their IP and you can get these old ROMs legitimately designed to run on your current hardware for pennies on their online store.

      I get upset at a lot of anti-piracy bullshit, but at least Nintendo actively do something with their IP.

    • To be fair, Nintendo do at least offer a huge chunk of their back catalogue, often in many forms, for sale. That they do not offer official ROM releases for user to play on PCs, which is a shame, but if any company has a right to protect 20 old copyright it is the company that is still actively selling that copyright.

  • by shentino ( 1139071 ) <shentino@gmail.com> on Wednesday November 14, 2018 @03:42AM (#57641074)

    ...why Nintendo gets ALL the roms?

    I mean surely there are games out there that Nintendo doesn't have copyright for. Why should they get the chance to reverse engineer someone else's IP?

    What would the likes of Namco, Accolade, Sega, and so on have to say about this?

    • by Anonymous Coward

      Silly consumer! Petty laws like copyright do not apply to corporations.

    • reverse engineer

      Reverse engineer a 30 year old game designed for a system that no longer exists? I'm sure if Nintendo wanted to waste money they could just throw cash into the boiler in their basement. But really let's get a grip. It's not like they couldn't just dump the ROMs like any other person did.

  • The Judgment ... The suit never went to court; instead, the couple sought to settle

    Can it be said to be a "judgment", if no court, judge, police, or any official officer of justice has anything to do with the outcome?

    A permanent injunction, prohibiting them from USING, sharing, or distributing Nintendo ROMs or other materials again in the future, has been included in the settlement.

    Is it possible for an injunction to stripe something that is considered a right of all owners of cartridge games from someone? This would seem to not only prevent backup copies, but any sort of participation in the modding scene at all (I am assuming no one has designed something that plugs into a nintendo console to allow you to play mods of old cartridge mario games).
    Could

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