Roms, Are Any Considered Public Domain |
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| bubbaz3d |
Mar 30 2005, 03:14 AM
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I've been in the emulation scene for a while and am wondering which roms are considered public domain. A while back I heard about a "law" or something that said if the company no longer produced and or sold the game / system it was considered public domain. I'm pretty sure it's legal to own the roms of games that you owned, I used to have supermario brothers 3 for nes would it then be considered legal to download, or would I need to create the rom myself? So I also heard that old arcade, atari, intellivision roms are free/public domain, is this true. If you know please help.
So overall what are free/public domain and if I owned the original is it legal to own the rom?
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| Scoobysnaxx |
Mar 30 2005, 05:03 AM
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See pinned topic above "Beginners Guide To Xbox Emulation, New to emulation? Read this first!QUOTE Q: Is emulation legal? A: I can not provide a definite answer to that, because no one knows for sure. Cases are being fought in the courts right now to decide that question. Generally, it is thought that emulators by themselves are perfectly legal. There has not been a company that I know of that has won a court battle over an emulator (yet). ROMs on the other hand are where the trouble is. You are allowed a backup of a ROM image if you own the original cartridge. However, you should not possess a ROM image if you do not own the cartridge. You are breaking the law, and there is no "24 hour rule" (which is used on many web-sites) or anything like that will protect you. But it's a well known fact that not many people follow this rule. QUOTE And yes, in the eyes of the law it’s still considered piracy even if the game is 10 years old and not for sale anymore. To be honest I think many people ask these types of questions knowing full well they intend to get the roms anyway, but just want to "hear what makes em feel better" As for your "used to own" comment - I would like to see that hold up anywhere. Well i used to own that movie/game/software - I just can't seem to find it There are also many topics related to this (this question pops up quite a bit as you can imagine), but you can press the search button as well as I. Happy hunting This post has been edited by Scoobysnaxx: Mar 30 2005, 05:07 AM
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| yodanut |
Mar 30 2005, 06:57 AM
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Such claims are false. If the copyright has not expired and the copyright owner has not released the intellectual property into public domain, any unauthorized reproduction is piracy. Atari in particular still very much believes in the continued value of their IPs regardless of their age, as displayed by their affiliation with Starroms, to my knowledge the only place where you can legally purchase and download game roms. A handful of previously commercial titles have also been released into the public domain, such as Zero Tolerance for the Genesis or Daikatana for the Game Boy, but these are by and large the exception and not the rule. That said, the fact that large chunk of old games for past consoles are out-of-production, often the product of long-defunct companies who can no longer profit from them, and many times ignored by their current copyright owners certainly makes an argument in favor of the morality of downloading them, but the legality of such an activity remains a more distinct issue.
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| AZImmortal |
Mar 30 2005, 06:47 PM
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QUOTE(JACKERL @ Mar 30 2005, 12:06 AM) You might be supprised as to what you will find... The grey area becomes greyer... www.copyright.gov.htm On October 28, 2003, the Librarian of Congress, on the recommendation of the Register of Copyrights, announced the classes of works subject to the exemption from the prohibition against circumvention of technological measures that control access to copyrighted works. The four classes of works exempted are: Section 3 (3) Computer programs and video games distributed in formats that have become obsolete and which require the original media or hardware as a condition of access. A format shall be considered obsolete if the machine or system necessary to render perceptible a work stored in that format is no longer manufactured or is no longer reasonably available in the commercial marketplace.Most roms, like the ones that mame requires fall into this catogory... Most laws can be interpreted many ways... make of this what you will... Basically if the system is no longer manufactured, no longer available to buy in the market place, then copyright laws can be manipulated... Not to say you can start selling roms as this would still be infringment and theft... Jackerl most roms don't fall into that category because older games get re-released on new platforms all the time, so a game can practically never become obsolete in the sense that there's no hardware to play them on. QUOTE(DolfhinDC @ Mar 30 2005, 07:03 AM) IANAL But I still don't think you are getting sued for downloading roms perhaps if you host them or sell them but you will be pretty safe by just downloading them. it's illegal to download any copyrighted item (even if you own the original). the only legal way to own a backup is to make it yourself from the original. whether or not legal action would be taken against you would be up to the copyright holder.
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| JACKERL |
Mar 31 2005, 10:18 AM
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Again as I said these grey area laws are very open to interpretation, how do you think there are sooo many websites offering Rom Burnings for a small charge to cover costs? Would not these have been sued or stopped ages ago for distributing...? I mean you can even pay via paypal for these services which is highly traceable...
Thought there was a big difference between the actual roms from the obsolete arcade machines and the re-released games. For one thing, the re-released games do not run on the original arcade machines, it is illegal to copy and distribute these cos they are re-written for modern day systems that are still reasonably available in the commercial marketplace.
The actual arcade roms that need the original arcade hardware to work which are not still reasonably available in the commercial marketplace, fall into a different category...
Do the re-released games contain the actual rom image or is it completely re-written code? I know the Dragons Lair series actually contain the arcade images, but these are cheep enough to buy off ebay if you want them anyway, but as for the rest...
A format shall be considered obsolete if the machine or system necessary to render perceptible a work stored in that format is no longer manufactured or is no longer reasonably available in the commercial marketplace.
Note the stored in that format bit. Rewritten games are a different format.
Still, if you feel that you are breaking the law, then don't download or distribute, as it’s your own personal conscience...
But still I feel the debate will continue.
Jackerl
This post has been edited by JACKERL: Mar 31 2005, 10:23 AM
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| DolfhinDC |
Mar 31 2005, 03:07 PM
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QUOTE(AZImmortal @ Mar 30 2005, 06:53 PM) most roms don't fall into that category because older games get re-released on new platforms all the time, so a game can practically never become obsolete in the sense that there's no hardware to play them on. it's illegal to download any copyrighted item (even if you own the original). the only legal way to own a backup is to make it yourself from the original. whether or not legal action would be taken against you would be up to the copyright holder. Yeah I know, i'm just saying that the changes of being sued are small. It's tolerated by the feds they won't send in a swat team to recover your collection of NES roms. Just like smoking weed, ofcourse it's illegal in most country's but not much of them will arrest you if you smoke a joint on the street (excluding country's with no personal freedom).
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