Why Piracy Fears are Keeping Some Researchers from Accessing the Games They Need (www.ign.com)
from dvdnet62@feddit.nl to technology@lemmy.ml on 18 May 2024 03:09
https://feddit.nl/post/15324289

#technology

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thesmokingman@programming.dev on 18 May 2024 03:39 next collapse

I really struggle with the justification present in the article. “I need to emulate to do my job as an academic” is pretty hollow. “I want to emulate because I want to learn” is the real reason and, as an academic myself, I don’t feel like there’s a higher ground that gives me access to literally anything I want just because I want to learn.

If the argument was “the copyright system is fucked and knowledge needs to be more open” I would be 100% behind that. I feel that way. I just don’t think someone should get to say “show me your secrets because I’ve arbitrarily decided to make my next publication about your secrets.”

Godort@lemm.ee on 18 May 2024 04:54 next collapse

The argument is that “we would like to study these works of art in a purely academic setting, and are willing to limit access to academics only, we just need to make sure it’s going to work even if you guys stop supporting it”

The corporations involved seem to read this argument as “we are looking to start a game streaming service, please give us free access to all your games to distribute at our whim”

billgamesh@lemmy.ml on 18 May 2024 05:13 next collapse

Especially because people who want to pirate games for playing have no qualms. Right now the restriction is specificall on people who want to research legally

MudMan@fedia.io on 18 May 2024 05:14 collapse

The ridiculousness of this is that out-of-print game libraries are already freely available online for no effort. Pirating games of the late 90s and early 2000s is trivial. This is yet another case where a legitimate use of software (academic research, preservation) is made more difficult than just simple emulation by broken DRM and copyright rules.

Call me crazy, but if libraries and academics are legally prevented from preserving art while alleged "illegal piracy" is forced to do the bulk of game categorization, research and preservation I'd say your copyright system has thoroughly failed at its intended purpose.

MudMan@fedia.io on 18 May 2024 05:11 next collapse

That doesn't seem to be the argument being made, though. It's not "I need to emulate to do my job as an academic", it's "academic institutions can't bypass DRM or make games remotely accessible for academic purposes", emulation or no emulation.

Which in turn is a big part of your second statement.

The headline mentions emulation, and it certainly is the most effortless way to stream access to a different location, which is what the proposal is about, but that's not the focus of the argument. The argument is about remote access for academic purposes.

billgamesh@lemmy.ml on 18 May 2024 05:14 next collapse

But if it was illegal to research 99% of your current field even if the information existed you may feel differently

paraphrand@lemmy.world on 18 May 2024 07:45 next collapse

Just wanted to say I share your complicated thoughts on this. It’s not as simple as “Rah! Rah! Piracy!” No one is entitled to another person’s work. But things get nuanced and messy fast once you move beyond that narrow contextualization.

MudMan@fedia.io on 18 May 2024 09:04 collapse

People are absolutely entitled to other people's work, it's called "public services".

I get what you mean, but the absolute way that trope is stated always rubs me the wrong way.

Dark_Dragon@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 18 May 2024 08:22 collapse

Copyright protection for an individual for 20 years. And For individual with corporation or corporation only then for 10 years max. More than that is just stupid. With these humanity overall knowledge and technology improve and decreases copyright infringement (not piracy) overall.

delirious_owl@discuss.online on 18 May 2024 06:01 next collapse

Games they “need”?

riodoro1@lemmy.world on 18 May 2024 08:43 next collapse

They are doing a very important study.

AnUnusualRelic@lemmy.world on 18 May 2024 12:00 collapse

It’s for science you see.

AndrasKrigare@beehaw.org on 18 May 2024 20:49 collapse

Yeah, I feel like the article would be more persuasive if they gave any examples of what research they are doing which requires these specific old games.

Zerush@lemmy.ml on 18 May 2024 08:10 collapse

It is the gaming industry itself that plagiarizes and pirates others continuously since Pacman. But of course, they don’t want others to do it.