Guy Who Taunted Nintendo About Streaming Pirated Switch Games Before Release Now Faces $7.5 Million Lawsuit (kotaku.com)
from Rider@eviltoast.org to games@lemmy.world on 09 Nov 15:34
https://eviltoast.org/post/9975455

#games

threaded - newest

icecreamtaco@lemmy.world on 09 Nov 15:54 next collapse

Yeah this guy seems like an idiot and there’s no moral high ground here. Nintendo can have him

Beryl@jlai.lu on 09 Nov 15:59 next collapse

This idiot brought this on himself AND is probably at least partially responsible for the recent crackdown on Switch emulation by Nintendo. I won’t shed a tear for him.

CosmoNova@lemmy.world on 09 Nov 17:17 collapse

Not to defend leakers even a bit and Nintendo has every right to go after them legally. However, the emulation crackdown is just Nintendo flexing their legal team on small devs who’ve done everything they can to discourage leaks from spreading within their limited reach. It’s 100% on Nintendo and they themselves are acting in a legal gray zone to bully 3rd parties into giving up. If any of the emulation teams had the resources to simply deal with big N, the situation would probably look a little different.

I guess what I’m trying to say is, yes leakers are in the wrong but no, they didn’t kill emulation with their actions even when it provoked Nintendo.

wizardbeard@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 09 Nov 17:23 collapse

Small caveat:

The first switch emulator that was taken down (I think yuzu), was justified by Nintendo as copyright infringement because people (including moderators) were sharing copyrighted material openly on their public discord. BIOS files, links to games, and early leaks.

The more recent one (Ryujinx I think) was the one that did things right, so Nintendo didn’t have that copyright leg to stand on. So instead (according to the maintainer of the Mac fork) they sent goons to the house of the head dev in Brazil… to “talk” him into taking it down.

vozercozer@lemmy.world on 09 Nov 18:19 next collapse

Wait, they sent people to their house? What the fuck? Are they a video game company, or the mob?

Ghyste@sh.itjust.works on 09 Nov 18:27 next collapse

Yes.

avattar@lemmy.sdf.org on 09 Nov 19:00 next collapse

They are from Japan, so yakuza? They probably just hire local muscle, though.

SomethingBurger@jlai.lu on 09 Nov 20:25 collapse

The Ryujinx dev is Brazilian IIRC.

skulblaka@sh.itjust.works on 09 Nov 19:44 next collapse

You could ask the same thing of Wizards of the Coast who sent goons to a guy’s house over some Magic The Gathering cards.

We live in an age where these two things are becoming interchangeable.

Ashtear@lemm.ee on 10 Nov 00:03 collapse

It was literally the Pinkertons. Long-time union infiltrators.

shani66@ani.social on 10 Nov 19:03 collapse

God we really are beyond fucked, aren’t we?

Catoblepas@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 09 Nov 20:21 next collapse

I read an article about a leather artist who recycled secondhand Gucci (I think? It was a big name fashion brand is all I recall) bags into wallets and things like that, and despite everything being clearly labeled to make sure nobody could mistake it for an official product, they had a similar experience. I wish I could find the article again, because I don’t remember what came of it and my search skills are failing me.

ipkpjersi@lemmy.ml on 09 Nov 22:52 next collapse

I mean, they are located in Japan, so it’s not like Yakuza don’t exist (though to be fair Yakuza don’t really target foreigners).

CosmoNova@lemmy.world on 09 Nov 23:19 next collapse

In 1999, Nintendo got a woman in Japan arrested over - and get this - sharing erotic fan art. I’ve read they also might’ve sent private detectives to stalk after her before the arrest, but couldn’t find anything quickly. Anyway it sparked a big shit storm and a debate about what copyright holders are allowed to do, legally and morally.

Agent_Karyo@lemmy.world on 09 Nov 22:47 collapse

Wow, this is kind of thing that can make one reevaluate what methods are most appropriate when dealing with corruption and oligarchs.

[deleted] on 10 Nov 00:01 collapse

.

Lanusensei87@lemmy.world on 09 Nov 16:00 next collapse

For his next stream, dude’s gonna rat out the location of every drug dealer around his house.

Grangle1@lemm.ee on 09 Nov 16:20 next collapse

Well, play with fire enough and you’ll get burned. No sympathy from me.

Bezier@suppo.fi on 09 Nov 16:24 next collapse

You did this to yourself mate

drspod@lemmy.ml on 09 Nov 16:32 next collapse

the lawsuit accuses Keighin of streaming leaked Switch games, including this month’s Mario & Luigi: Brothership, ahead of release using emulation software as many as 50 times in the last two years. Nintendo is seeking $150,000 in damages for each instance of alleged copyright infringement.

Hilarious that the screenshot Kotaku use in the article is his social media post with his recommendations of what sites to download the games from.

wizardbeard@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 09 Nov 17:24 next collapse

No way that wasn’t absolutely intentional.

DacoTaco@lemmy.world on 09 Nov 19:16 collapse

Kinda the reason i dont like kotaku tbh. They do such things very often and it always feel like they are taunting or flexing and it comes over as really douchy to me

Nyciferi@kbin.melroy.org on 09 Nov 16:36 next collapse

Idiot.

ModernRisk@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 09 Nov 16:59 next collapse

No sympathy, it’s his own fault. Sure, enjoy pirates games but don’t taunt, stream and publicly shout where to get them.

Enjoy leaked games in silence and talk about it once it hits official release date.

misterdoctor@lemmy.world on 09 Nov 20:14 next collapse

<img alt="" src="https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/1cb84f71-23b2-4931-90dd-98c729a3180d.webp">

sundray@lemmus.org on 09 Nov 22:03 collapse

Look, Nintendo is bullshit, bullying innocent creators for stupid, paranoid reasons… but c’mon. Play stupid games, win stupid prizes.