Nintendo is going after the developers of the open source switch emulator Yuzu

PropaGandalf@lemmy.world to Open Source@lemmy.ml – 636 points –
How strong is Nintendo’s legal case against Switch-emulator Yuzu?
arstechnica.com

Seriously what is this? Nintendo argues that by instructing users how to extract the prod.keys from their own switch the yuzu developers are essencially infringing on the DMCA.

So what? Now you can't even freely use your own property anymore because it goes against the design intentions of some big company that just want's to milk their users?

Nintendo goes directly after this argument in its lawsuit, arguing that buying a Switch game only means you "have Nintendo's authorization to play that single copy on an unmodified Nintendo Switch console."

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Where do we donate for legal fees?

It's futile. You are no match against a multi national corporation.

Give up, you are no match against the universe, time, gravity and other powers. Just end it. Why even bother continuing.

Could you stop with your nihilism?

CC BY-NC-SA 4.0

a) Your license footer is really cool! I will start including it as well.

b) Aren't quotes a bit problematic, as you include them in your work? This one is probably fine, as you (quite artistically) paraphrased it but direct quotes would be a problem, right?

CC BY-NC-SA 4.0

IMO the license footer is a bit sovereign-citizen-y, and likely unenforceable.

I think the Creative Commons would fail to apply to the source material, but using the source material should be fair use in almost every context on Lemmy.

a) 💖

b) I'm not entirely sure how quotes should work. I imagine that if you quote such licensed text immediately after, it's quite obvious who you're quoting. But if you quote it on some blog somewhere out in the interwebs, proper attribution must be given.
Newspapers do have to attribute whatever they quote (and if they're respectable, they will) because they're trying to earn money with it, but beyond that... no idea. I'm not a lawyer.
Good question though

CC BY-NC-SA 4.0

But he is right though. If Nintendo really wants it gone they'll just pull a sony-bleem. As long as there is no real regulation for this stuff, there is not much you can do.