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Blue Psychic, Programmer
Join Date: Feb 2007
Location: Home!
Posts: 8,814
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Okay, so we've talked about piracy, and had a thread locked asking if we pirated, so this is a place to suggest what could be done to fix, de-criminalize, or actually discourage piracy.
This is NOT a place to suggest pirating, provide ways of pirating, etc. This is taking the problem and finding a give-and-take solution that makes sense for both sides. I'm going to start off with a favored topic of mine: abandonware. There is legal abandonware, and then there are illegal oldwarez. If a company is not gaining anything from a property and has no plans to do so, I think it's easier to release it, rather than try to fight to protect it and wasting time, energy, and money. Or better yet, continue to sell it for a nominal fee, like 3D Realms. Digital distribution is removing barriers to cost like packaging and CD printing. After that point, any amount you charge is pure profit, minus hosting. And if you can still gain profits from a 20-year-old game, it means that people get the game they want for cheap, you get money you didn't even know you wanted for profit, and nobody has any reason to complain. In terms of DRM, keep it in the medium the game takes place in. If you have it on CD, do a CD key or CD check. If it's digital, a key should be fine on its own. If the game is offline, keep the security offline. You can put a certain amount of security on a game to deter casual piracy, which is really all you can hope for, without hurting the consumer. Anyone else have ideas? EDIT: Fuck, I made this in the wrong forum. Move plz? ![]()
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Journal | Twitter | FF Wiki (Talk) | Projects | Site Last edited by bluestarultor; 02-22-2010 at 02:15 PM. |
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#2 |
Fetched the Candy Cane!
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First, I'd like to say that I was extremely disappointed Seil was talking about pirating digital crap and not awesome pirates in movie/tv history. Or being a seafaring pirate yourself. I was extremely sad by that fact.
I personally would love to see more old games be sold for cheap. Steam and GOG.Com are great for me because I get old classics I love to play. I disagree with pirating because it really doesn't hurt the company at all that much and would more then anything hurt the people working on their project because their worth seems based on whether the thing sells or not. I have no problem paying money for a game thats worth it. If it isn't worth it I wont buy it, and if it has stupid DRM that's idiotic then I wont buy it either. It's consumer choice man! Piracy will never be stopped, people will always get free stuff because they don't want to spend money or are cheap. The whole I pirate because of DRM just seems to me to be a cop out to make them feel better. I do agree with what SMB said though, sometimes Pirating gets you a superior product and I wish it wasn't the case. But even so I wont do it, it's bad for my mojo! I really wish DUngeon keeper and Dungeon Keeper 2 would get resold. God I loved those games ![]()
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#3 | |
The revolution will be memed!
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D is for Dirty Commie! |
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#4 | ||
Blue Psychic, Programmer
Join Date: Feb 2007
Location: Home!
Posts: 8,814
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See where I'm going with this?
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#5 |
Keeper of the new
Join Date: Apr 2004
Location: A place without judgment
Posts: 4,506
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My solution is to wait for the market to self-destruct and better alternatives to be invented. Preferably something based on non-commercialism. I believe the greatest art will made by those who don't need to sell it to make a living.
On a sidenote, remember World of Goo? It had no copy protection whatsoever, but it did include a simple online component that let the designer say with some authority a few weeks after launch that 90% of the players had not paid for it. Then he was all "Whatevs it sold a lot anyway." I wouldn't mind if certain bigass corporations could show the same confidence as this lone starving artist.
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Hope insistent, trust implicit, love inherent, life immersed Last edited by Amake; 02-22-2010 at 02:52 PM. |
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#6 | |||
Super stressed!
Join Date: Feb 2007
Location: British Columbia
Posts: 8,081
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You could still probably do that, if you want. Anyways, as I PM'd Synk, Quote:
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#7 | |
Blue Psychic, Programmer
Join Date: Feb 2007
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I'm surprised that nobody's jumped onto using that simple online component to actually, y'know, track piracy numbers. If it's in World of Goo, it can't be that hard to do, no offense to the creator, given that big companies have a teensy bit more than one guy working on coding a given project. You'd think developers would be on that like white on rice.
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#8 |
synk-ism
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Oh, this is a good place for me to ask you, Blues, since I didn't want to tard up that other thread with this discussion.
Do you have references - that aren't Abandonia's pages - that prove the legality of "abandonware"? I found none today when I went poking about, and most of what I came across affirmed the illegality of it regardless of the very positive and good intentions of the people running such sites. I ask this not to argue with you, but because I really want to know what legal standing these sites are sitting on. I saw provisions for public/library archives and free reign for software that has fallen out of copyright, but for most software it appears that the copyright should still be protecting it. Not being able to purchase something and/or lack of action on the part of the copyright holders wasn't meant to be construed as a green light to go. Here's some stuff I came across: Gamespot article that interviews game developers, abandonware site owners, and some gamers US copyright law allows an exemption for places, such as the Internet Archive [who pushed for this], to have non-infringing uses of such software to be able to preserve software without the copy protection schemes it may have once had (eg: requiring a dongle to be attached to the machine, obsolete source media). This is not claiming it is OK for users to download free copies of the software. On the other hand, the Orphan Works Act of 2006 seems to provide provisions for "infringers" to be fine if they conduct a "reasonable search" for the correct information and original copyright holder, etc. Technically speaking, though I am no lawyer, it doesn't appear to count "hey we can't buy this in a store" as a reasonable search. more info overall, including the 2008 update to the same act; not much different e: I forgot to note that I agree with you that it's much easier, on all sides, to recognize that people like older software and to release it in some fashion, either as a free download [hey, some companies are doing this -- see our C&C discussion, Sim City, etc.] or, like you suggested, for some nominal fee. The legal fees and unnecessary trouble of going through the rig-amoral is likely one of the reasons abandonware sites don't get bugged too much, especially when the original software company doesn't exist any more.
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Find love.
Last edited by synkr0nized; 02-22-2010 at 07:14 PM. |
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#9 |
FRONT KICK OF DOOM!
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Shamus Young is our friend. And I'm sure that our friends in Brazil can attest to what happens when copyright is too strong.
Let's not forget, when a server is shut down there's even more to complain to people about. Who has control of your game if they're no longer supported? These are the type of questions people should be asking when a game can just shut down without any way to enjoy a game you want to play. |
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Professional Threadkiller
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