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7 votes
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The Steam subscriber agreement has dropped its forced arbitration clause, allowing gamers to take legal action against the platform
64 votes -
Cards Against Humanity sues SpaceX, alleges “invasion” of land on US/Mexico border
114 votes -
Nintendo and The Pokemon Company file lawsuit against Pocketpair for Palworld
33 votes -
Groundbreaking lawsuit accuses Roblox of exploiting young creators
22 votes -
Microsoft, Rockstar, Epic, and others are being sued for using "addictive psychological features" in games like Minecraft, GTA 5, and Fortnite
28 votes -
On Bleem v. Sony and the legality of emulators
The Bleem v. Sony case is often brought up whenever legal action against emulators happens, and I got curious, so I dug a bit deeper. It's quite hard, as most of the actual source material is not...
The Bleem v. Sony case is often brought up whenever legal action against emulators happens, and I got curious, so I dug a bit deeper. It's quite hard, as most of the actual source material is not publicly available for free, only the appeal decision by the ninth court. But from what I've gathered from secondary sources, this is what actually happened.
- Sony sues Bleem on one count of unfair competition and one count of copyright violation for the use of Sony game screenshots in Bleem advertising.
- A judge dismisses the unfair competition claim. Sony wins the copyright violation.
- Bleem appeals, and the Ninth Court reverses the decision on copyright violation for advertisement material.
- Sony sues again, this time for unfair competition and also patent infringement for using their BIOS.
- Sony and Bleem settle for an undisclosed amount. Bleem declares bankruptcy.
As far as I can tell, the only precedent was on whether or not you can use a competitor's screenshots in your advertisement, and indeed that's all I've ever seen the case referred to in future cases. The first unfair competition claim was dismissed (so cannot be a precedent) and the second case was settled. I see a lot of people say that this case set a "precedent" that "emulation is legal", but I don't see how?
Is this just another case where through a game of telephone and rumors people just take it for assumed fact that somehow or another this case "set a precedent that emulation is legal"? For over 20 years?
On whether or not emulation is legal, generally things are legal unless they are made to be illegal; there is certainly no specific law that says that emulation is legal. The question, then, is whether or not emulation is inadvertently made illegal by an existing law.
In that respect, Bleem v. Sony is a useful indicator in that Sony's lawyers couldn't really find anything concrete to nail Bleem on. But not really more than that, unless you really care about whether or not an emulator can use screenshots in their advertisements.
19 votes -
The Nintendo DS emulator Drastic is now free as Yuzu lawsuit fallout begins
26 votes -
Yuzu, popular Nintendo Switch emulator, settles with Nintendo for $2.4m and halts development and distribution indefinitely
76 votes -
Nintendo is suing the creators of popular Switch emulator Yuzu, saying their tech illegally circumvents Nintendo's software encryption and facilitates piracy
67 votes -
AAA studios sued for addictive games | Cold Take
9 votes -
Magnus Carlsen and Hans Niemann settle dispute over cheating claims that rocked chess – US player had filed lawsuit against former world champion
31 votes -
Why Pac-Man won
9 votes -
Bungie wins landmark lawsuit against player who harassed Destiny staff
https://www.polygon.com/23793493/bungie-destiny-2-harassment-lawsuit Win empowers employers to protect employees from online harm Bungie has won almost $500,000 in damages from a Destiny 2 player...
https://www.polygon.com/23793493/bungie-destiny-2-harassment-lawsuit
Win empowers employers to protect employees from online harm
Bungie has won almost $500,000 in damages from a Destiny 2 player who harassed one of its community managers and his wife with abusive, racist, and distressing calls and messages, and sent an unsolicited pizza order to their home in a manner designed to intimidate and frighten the couple.
According to members of Bungie’s legal team, the judgment from a Washington state court sets important precedents that will empower employers to go after anyone who harasses their employees online, and strengthen the enforcement of laws against online trolling and harassment. “This one is special,” Bungie’s attorney Dylan Schmeyer tweeted.
As laid out in the court’s judgment, the defendant, Jesse James Comer, was “incensed” when the community manager — whom both Bungie and the court declined to name, to protect them from further harassment — spotlighted some fan art by a Black community member. Using anonymous phone numbers, Comer left a string of “hideous, bigoted” voicemails on the community manager’s personal phone, some asking that Bungie create options in Destiny 2 “in which only persons of color would be killed,” before proceeding to threaten the community manager’s wife with more racist voicemails and texts. Then he ordered a pizza to be delivered to their home, leaving instructions for the driver to knock at least five times, loudly, to make the intrusion as frightening as possible.
The court ruled that Comer was liable to pay over $489,000 in damages, fees, and expenses it had accrued in protecting and supporting its employees, investigating Comer, and prosecuting the case against him.
As laid out in a Twitter thread by Kathryn Tewson, a crusading paralegal who worked on the case, the judgment is significant because it recognizes that patterns of harassment escalate from online trolling to real-world violence; establishes that harassment of an employee for doing their job damages the employer as well, which can then use its resources to go after the culprit; and recognized a new tort — a legal term for a form of injury or harm for which courts can impose liability — around cyber and telephone harassment.
(article continues)
38 votes -
US District Court Judge dismisses Hans Niemann's $100 million lawsuit against Magnus Carlsen, among others, in chess cheating scandal
15 votes -
Sony’s confidential PlayStation secrets just spilled because of a Sharpie
49 votes -
D&D lawsuit: The new TSR declares bankruptcy, pausing court case
14 votes -
Microsoft has been temporarily restrained from buying Activision Blizzard, US judge rules
62 votes -
Investigation: Who’s telling the truth about Disco Elysium?
16 votes -
Bungie tracks down another Destiny 2 cheat maker – Daniel Larsen was one of the pseudonymous developers involved in last year's Elite Boss Tech lawsuit
5 votes -
Saami Council has demanded Square Enix remove the Far Northern Attire from Final Fantasy XIV due to the use of cultural property and an infringement of rights
10 votes -
Dungeons & Dragons’ new license tightens its grip on competition
28 votes -
Chess's cheating scandal has taken another bizarre twist – Hans Niemann accuses Magnus Carlsen of paying fellow chess player €300 to shout abuse
6 votes -
Mick Gordon's full statement regarding Doom Eternal
28 votes -
Hans Niemann sues champion Magnus Carlsen and others for $100 million over cheating claim
14 votes -
California lawsuit against PlayStation alleges gender discrimination
5 votes -
Judge dismisses antitrust lawsuit filed against Valve
18 votes -
Activision Blizzard settles with federal employment agency for $18 Million
14 votes -
Activision Blizzard are being sued by their investors now
9 votes -
Valve argues anti-Steam suit lacks “the most basic elements” of antitrust case
13 votes -
Blizzard recruiters asked hacker if she ‘liked being penetrated’ at job fair
26 votes -
Activision Blizzard employees are walking out in protest
16 votes -
Activision Blizzard sued by California over ‘frat boy’ culture
36 votes -
Sega sued for ‘rigged’ arcade machine
7 votes -
Report: Quantic Dream executives cry, ask if they can lie during recent court appearance
8 votes -
Humble Bundle creator brings antitrust lawsuit against Valve over Steam
19 votes -
Apple subpoenas Valve as part of its legal battle with Epic: Valve fights back
21 votes -
Brazilian court orders Sony to unban PS5 console
9 votes -
Billy Mitchell and Walter Day are being sued by Twin Galaxies' new owner for fraud
9 votes -
Nintendo’s lawyers nuke ‘The Missing Link’ fangame with copyright complaint
12 votes -
Rune II developer Human Head Studios is being sued by publisher Ragnarok after it abandoned the game one day after its release in order to join Bethesda
7 votes -
Riot Games will pay at least $10 million to settle gender discrimination suit, split between all female employees who worked there in the last five years
17 votes -
French court says Valve must allow Steam users to resell games
33 votes -
Riot Games reaches agreement in principle to settle class action gender discrimination lawsuit
8 votes -
Twitch is suing the trolls who flooded Artifact streams with porn and gore
13 votes -
The state of California is investigating Riot Games for gender discrimination
12 votes -
Tfue’s fight against Faze Clan is new for e-sports, not YouTube
5 votes -
Niantic is tweaking Pokémon Go to settle a US lawsuit with angry homeowners
12 votes -
Nintendo awarded $12 million judgment against ROM site operators
24 votes -
id Software and Doom co-creator settles legal fight with ZeniMax
9 votes