• @androidisking@lemmy.world
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    1297 months ago

    Nintendo is one of the worst companies that always want to set an “example” about the DMCA. They don’t realize they are fighting a battle they cannot win. Emulators are perfectly legal as long as the emulators don’t contain any code that was in ownership from them.

    That being said, I’m betting some of those forks were following the DMCA but Nintendo still shut them down. This is where copyright needs to be reevaluated.

    I’m honestly not surprised they haven’t gone after dolphin emulator since those devs contain the encryption keys to play the iso files.

    • @Contramuffin@lemmy.world
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      287 months ago

      So, I agree with your general points, but I think part of the reason Nintendo is so harsh towards Yuzu is because, as far as I’m aware, Yuzu does actually contain proprietary code from Nintendo.

      My understanding is that the Yuzu team used a Switch development kit instead of reverse engineering the Switch as they had claimed, so the entire code is essentially tainted because it’s unclear which parts came from the development kit and which parts came from true reverse engineering

        • @Contramuffin@lemmy.world
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          167 months ago

          I tried looking for it, but all my searches are flooded with articles about this current takedown wave. I did find a forum post talking about it, though, so I know I’m not crazy.

          I might try searching again later, in which case I’ll edit this comment.

          Also, I know this isn’t really relevant to the question, but the Yuzu team was doing some really shady stuff, even ignoring the development kit usage. For instance, they were collecting telemetry data from all of their users and were using illegally obtained roms to optimize Yuzu, to the point where the Yuzu team was able to get games to work before the game’s official release

          • @Adanisi@lemmy.zip
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            7 months ago

            They did do shady stuff but I hate that the “TOTK worked on the Switch perfectly on release day” is thrown around as an argument. It’s an emulator, emulating the switch hardware, if it does it’s job well of course it’ll do that.

            I know that they used leaked builds but that just annoys me.

            And obligatory, fuck Nintendo.

            • KaynA
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              47 months ago

              I’ve seen hearsay that there have been Yuzu patches specifically to aid compatibility with TOTK before it was officially out, which would have greatly supported the “mainly/primarily used for piracy” argument in court.

            • @Contramuffin@lemmy.world
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              17 months ago

              I would agree with you, but there was apparently evidence that specific patches were made that allowed TOTK to work. And then if you take a look at the link, there were screenshots of the Nintendo documents to suggest that TOTK apparently was not the Yuzu team’s first rodeo when it came to patching for pre-release games

              • sebinspace
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                47 months ago

                I kind of want to just see the evidence. No offense, but the heresay is obnoxious.

              • Natanael
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                47 months ago

                It doesn’t matter if there’s patches to make it work specifically, if they don’t contain Nintendo’s code. At most they could accuse whoever contributed the patch with piracy / breach of NDA or similar for having downloaded the ROM prior to release (couldn’t have purchased it) but that doesn’t impact the emulator itself

          • @phx@lemmy.ca
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            87 months ago

            IIRC they also had some stuff going around about how Tears of the Kingdom ran better on the emulator than the actual Switch.

            Pretty sure that was the point at which Nintendo decided to unleash the dogs on them

          • @Adanisi@lemmy.zip
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            47 months ago

            That’s not “proprietary code”, those are keys. And they actually didn’t include keys, Yuzu did require you to supply a key, however a lot of them were then derived from the key supplied.

            And there is no other way to do emulation and a whole host of other things if you can’t use their keys. Make no mistake, Nintendo wishes it could make using the keys at all illegal.

            • @atrielienz@lemmy.world
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              27 months ago

              Here’s the thing. The creators of Yuzu folded which is a win as far as Nintendo is concerned and a loss for everyone else who uses the yuzu emulators. Your semantics about the situation aren’t helping. All I did was supply a link to a news story that was already available on Lemmy on literally the technology community. This has already been hashed out.

          • Natanael
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            37 months ago

            That’s not code and Texas Instruments already lost on that one

    • Icalasari
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      157 months ago

      Part of the problem is they apply Japanese copyright law to an international level. Wouod be cool if they hit the wrong target, got sued for trying to apply their laws to the world stage, and got matched each time they appealed until their war chest got drained dry

      • @catloaf@lemm.ee
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        107 months ago

        The DMCA is a US law, so I don’t see how you can say they’re using Japanese law.

        • Queen HawlSera
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          7 months ago

          In Japan, there is no concept of “Fair Use”, it’s why they don’t have a modding scene and why Japanese devs actively fight against people trying to mod their games. Nintendo uses DMCA on things that are clearly fair use (Parodies like SML, Nintendo themed mods on Garry’s Mod), and people cave solely because they can’t afford to go to court.

          It’s also literally a criminal offense in Japan to modify Pokemon data because tournaments in that scene are taken that seriously.

          Or to be blunt, Nintendo abuses DMCA (an American Legal system) by applying it to things that would only be illegal in Japan, but are perfectly legal in America as it’s outside of Japan, and since the courts only care about who has more money, no one’s pointed this out as they’d have to do so in court in front of Nintendo’s army of lawyers.

  • Calvin
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    817 months ago

    Good luck trying to wipe my hard drive fuckers 🖕🏻

  • @Blackmist@feddit.uk
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    447 months ago

    Why are people continuing to host those on GitHub. MS had shown itself willing to take down anything at the drop of a hat.

    If it’s on GitHub, it’s not yours.

  • Mubelotix
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    207 months ago

    We need forge federation. Nintendo would never be able to delete forks on thousands of different servers

        • Mubelotix
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          47 months ago

          Yet nobody is going to discover your repo as nobody knows your server

      • Cethin
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        7 months ago

        As another comment says, git is just the version control software. You mean a decentralized hub for sharing git repos I assume. Git hub/lab/whatever are just websites that share a link fundamentally. They also all store the data for your repo, but there’s no reason that would need to be stored in the same place as the hub to find repos.

  • @Metz@lemmy.world
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    187 months ago

    Did not get a e-mail but my fork is gone. That can’t be legal can it? I’m in the EU.

    • dinckel
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      257 months ago

      It doesn’t matter where you are. The company is based in the US, so they’re required to follow local law

    • KaynA
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      157 months ago

      Why wouldn’t it be legal?

      • @Metz@lemmy.world
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        117 months ago

        Yeah i tend to forget that github is in the US and their allmighty DMCA can be used to take down anything. i just have a hard time believing this shit would fly in the EU.

        • @kernelle@lemmy.world
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          77 months ago

          It would, it has, next step after DMCA even in the EU is legal action, which nintendo already fought in court. I don’t know about you but I’m not ready to defend someone else’s code in court.

          • @john89@lemmy.ca
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            37 months ago

            I don’t know about you but I’m not ready to defend someone else’s code in court.

            Errr… will you ever have to? Lol.

            • @kernelle@lemmy.world
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              27 months ago

              Comment OP is forking Yuzu code, we’re talking about how this is fair or unfair. When you fork DMCA’d code you open yourself up to litigation and having to defend someone else’s code in court.

              I won’t, OP might. Did you actually not read the context before replying? Lol.

        • KaynA
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          67 months ago

          Again, why would it not fly in the EU?

          • JohnEdwa
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            7 months ago

            Emulation isn’t illegal, reversing encryption isn’t illegal, software patents aren’t valid in some countries.

            That’s for example why the US can’t do anything about VLC “breaking” DVD encryption, as they are based in France and aren’t doing anything wrong.

          • @john89@lemmy.ca
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            47 months ago

            Europeans actually care about their consumers.

            Americans just view them as fat paypigs who are too stupid to fight for their own interests.

      • Natanael
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        67 months ago

        With DMCA get uploader is supposed to get notified and get a chance to file a counter claim

  • @john89@lemmy.ca
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    177 months ago

    Glad the version of Yuzu I have downloaded is apparently a really good, performant, and stable one.

    Bless these devs. They did god’s work.