Overwritten.net
Games => General Gaming => Topic started by: MysterD on Sunday, November 26, 2006, 07:43:51 AM
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Old games have even more of a shot to live forever -- yay!!!! (http://www.joystiq.com/2006/11/23/us-copyright-office-grants-abandonware-rights/)
US Copyright Office grants abandonware rights
Posted Nov 23rd 2006 9:50PM by Ross Miller
Filed under: Hacks, Retro, Business
Here's something abandonware enthusiasts can be thankful for: the Library of Congress yesterday approved six exemptions to US copyright. The one most pertinent to gamers is that, for archival purposes, copy protection on software no longer being sold or supported by its copyright holder can be cracked.
What does this mean? Well, those retro games -- classic or otherwise -- that you can't seem to find anywhere can now be preserved without fear of ramifications. Although it is still unlawful to distribute the old games, free or otherwise, rarely do any abandonware cases go to court. The ruling is more symbolic than anything, but a step in the right direction.
Other rulings involved the rights of consumers to crack cell phone software locks for use on other carriers, the rights of educators to make compilations of DVD scenes, and the rights of blind people to use third-party software in order to read copy-protected electronic books. These rulings come as clarifications of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA). All new rules take effect on Monday and last for three years.
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Sweet! It's a step in the right direction :)
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Sweet! It's a step in the right direction :)
I agree.
Especially for the future, when games that are STARFORCE equipped get cracked. ;)
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Cool.
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Now all we need is the legal right to distribute them.
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Very cool indeed. Distribution will come once we get a new generation of people into office and they realize that these games need to be preserved just like classic film and classic literature. It'll happen, and someday they'll probably be a library for it all.
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Wow. That's pretty amazing. These days it seems like every step is in the copyright holders' direction. It's nice to see.
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The US gov't not siding with huge corporations when it comes to copywright/intellectual property laws?!!!? Unheard of!!!
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Totally unheard of in this century.
Edit: I got that backward, didn't I? Oh well. You know what I meant. :P