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posted by martyb on Sunday April 12 2015, @12:21AM   Printer-friendly
from the you-pays-your-money--you-takes-your-chances dept.

Ars Technica has an interesting tidbit today about one of our more hotly discussed topics here... whether or not "abandonware" should continue to receive copyright protection — Entertainment Publishers fight to block third-party revival of “abandoned” game servers

This article concerns the trade industry response to a brief filed by the EFF last November.

A major game industry trade group is fighting back against a proposed DMCA exemption that seeks to give gamers the right to modify games with abandoned online servers in order to restore online gameplay and functionality. The Entertainment Software Association (ESA), with support (.pdf) from the Motion Picture Association of America and Recording Industry Association of America, argues that the proposed exemption would amount to "enabling—and indeed encouraging—the play of pirated games and the unlawful reproduction and distribution of infringing content."

[...] The US Copyright Office will be holding public hearings [PDF] on the proposed DMCA exemptions May 19 through 21 in Washington DC and Los Angeles. The final round of written comments on the rule will be closed on May 1.

My own thoughts on this is likely our payment systems are just as unworkable as copyright law. Mechanisms are now in place to take our money, give us something, then abandon it, yet prohibit us from using it. Maybe its high time we consider a "Millennium Digital Currency Act" for payments so when the vendors want to abandon the service, the money transfers back to to the buyer, and the copyrights transfer back to the seller.

 
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  • (Score: 2) by Joe Desertrat on Sunday April 12 2015, @02:06AM

    by Joe Desertrat (2454) on Sunday April 12 2015, @02:06AM (#169199)

    It is the same as bridge trolls blocking other bridges to force you through theirs, and you ask the trolls why they care about you using other bridges? YOU ARE NOT PAYING THEM MONEY. That's why.

    Well, who cares (besides them)? I thought the purpose of copyrights was to promote useful progress in the arts and sciences. Someone's particular business model should not enter into it. Let the trolls offer a better value for those using their bridge and they won't have to block other bridges.

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