I briefly thought and commented about this in a thread about Nostrlaius. I think this might make for an interesting discussion and debate of its own.
Look at Lucas Arts and Disney with the Star Wars IP
EA has running a little Star Wars MMORPG called SWTOR
Why doesn't Disney or Lucas Arts before them not bring the hammer down on SWG emu's?
Just maybe these guys don't mind their fans being able to enjoy something from earlier days. Maybe its a company showing a little goodwill to a few thousand fans who have probably spent a lot of money supporting the IP
So why don't they bring the hammer down?
Aren't they worried about a few thousand fans getting a little fun out of the IP for Free?
They have both made billions and billions off Star Wars
Aren't they worried about losing some dough?
Are these people now playing Star Wars galaxies on EMU's stealing from Disney? They do own the IP
Shouldn't Disney be protecting their Stockholders?
Are the players playing SWG thieves?
Discuss
"Be water my friend" - Bruce Lee
Comments
And of course when you need to be principal or not.
are they thieves? Mr. Laserit, you know well that we use the word pirates on the web. Free men who do as they will, without the care for rules put in place by a government/organization they dont support. So, AYE , they've pirates. Free men all of'em!!!!
It seems on these here boards that if you play on a vanilla WoW emu, you are not a pirate... but a thief
"Be water my friend" - Bruce Lee
Screw the game, you are violating someone's copyright of a legally owned IP. The Star Wars IP
"Be water my friend" - Bruce Lee
Awast, in a free world where man is free, everything Shall be free... Harr.... Harrr
They could put their legal deparetment on it but it would probably cost them more money, and they might upset some fans who might buy EA games in the future.
I assume they have larger problems with Star wars copyright to bother with.
If 100K players suddenly started to play things would be different but now they have little to gain.
harr de harr harr
"Be water my friend" - Bruce Lee
If SWG emu servers had enough people that the potential losses outweighed the legal costs of pursuing a shutdown they might.
Between Verant, SOE, DBG, LucasArts, and Disney all being in the mix at one point or another, who's to say what exactly the licensing entailed and what carried forward? The devs who would care about the code are long removed now. If anyone is standing to lose anything it is EA. They paid to be awarded the license for SWTOR in the MMORPG field where SWG is a competitor. Disney probably does not care much at all seeing as the number is miniscule and the ill will they would get from a C&D would outweigh any gains they would realize.
Regardless, it won't bring Nostralius back. Blizzard did exactly what the law allows in regards to their IP and work. None of the players in this scenario have pursued the same course for reasons only they know.
Couldn't it set a precedent if the copyright holder chooses to do nothing?
"Be water my friend" - Bruce Lee
The law in some cases has determined that a developer does not hold the right to hold gamer's hostage by shutting down servers thereby making their purchased game obsolete and worth NOTHING.
No where in society are purchased goods considered 100% invaluable,that has AWLAYS been determined by people/consumers not by copyrights.
Imo copyright is of course a good idea and needed but also in some cases abused.Example Hasbro tries constantly to bend/twist copyright laws by trying to secure total rights to ideas that should NEVER be considered YOUR sole property. Ideassuch as "board game " or dice game or numbers game or a game that uses the Queen or King or anything along those lines,yet big powerful lawyers representing firms lieke Hasbro TRY to secure those rights.
Never forget 3 mile Island and never trust a government official or company spokesman.
East Asia and China could care even less, but then again, most of those countries have their internet locked down tighter than a submarine hatch.
10. Beware of what could happen to the license.
"If you enter into a paid-up license (when the licensee paid a one-time lump sum payment in lieu of future royalties) beware of assignment right: in the event a smaller licensee is acquired in the future by a larger company, if the license is assignable, the larger company may get a license without having to pay a dime to the patent owner. Make sure that in the event of licensee's insolvency or filing for bankruptcy, the license terminates automatically. If it doesn't, the license may be sold with other assets to a new buyer who will get the license without having to pay the IP owner."
- Alex Poltorak, founder, chairman and CEO of General Patent Corporation, co-author,The Essentials of Intellectual Property
source: http://www.inc.com/guides/2010/11/10-tips-for-licensing-intellectual-property.html
In a reverse of the example above, the people who might have a case either don't care or are removed from the equation. Disney and EA might be frothing at the mouth to get it shut down, but have no recourse.
http://fairuse.stanford.edu/overview/fair-use/disagreements-over-fair-use-when-are-you-likely-to-get-sued/
"Be water my friend" - Bruce Lee
Not really.
for that to happen they first need to have it taken to court.
This have been a good conversation
We have immigration laws in this country, and yet illegal immigrants are given jobs and drivers licenses in California with no repercussions from the federal government.
Laws are just paper without an attending and active punishment.
Definitely an argument there. I don't know how similar copyright law is in France.
According to the document "Fair Use" is also a long way from being fully defined.
Many precedents are yet to be set.
interesting stuff.
"Be water my friend" - Bruce Lee
WoW is not a dead game... It is still being developed. People might not agree with the direction but by that token i should have the right to pirate any movie or music i want because i do not agree with the direction of hollywood or the music biz....
As for SWG emu... it is just a matter of time. As soon as it gets enough traction... *fingergun gesture* Dead.
This have been a good conversation
It is of no benefit and many drawbacks for them to do so. In fact, it helps them keep the interests in the franchise broad and diverse.
In fact if anyone would go after it, it would be EA as the current license holder.
This have been a good conversation
It has always been a gray zone about legality. We started with 4000 players now we have like 8 lol
Point is: Even after 10 years we are still online.
Just like with SWG it would be more of a hassle to squash little non profit servers.
Why bother?
The case would be easy because Nostalrius straight jacked Blizzard's work that they paid for. Fair use wouldn't even need to apply. If Fair Use was the defense, it would also be relatively easy to show that they are losing money from it. Seeing as their sub numbers dropped drastically in the same time frame that Nostalrius came into being. It's easy to construe that at least some of those 800,000 people would still pay and play on official servers if Nostalrius was not around.
Also, in the case of the game itself, if any technology or anything was licensed by Blizzard from another company then Blizzard is obligated to protect those licenses and there would likely be multiple plaintiffs in the case.
There's really not much ground for Nostalrius to stand on. This is why emulated servers pretty much only exist so long as they fly under the radar and are, almost without exception, shuttered as soon as the C&D arrives.