erebus wrote:Just because a games producer doesn't follow up with copyright infringment law doesn't make it legal. Many games are still commerical available a quick ebay search for the likes of ZX Spectrum games will bring back a ball of old cassette tape games and consoles.
I think a small but respectable fee should be paid as royality to any game developers or production houses, much the same as Radio stations pay musicians, I know its impossible to do this, but I'm just calling a spade a spade, or in this case a pirate.
ebay don't count as does any second hand shop. Most of the companies today hate eBay and places like Gamestop, since they see buying and selling of second hand games as piracy.
Heck (if me memory remembers correctly) EA and Ubisoft as written code in their new releases that lock certain parts of their game if the game is run on a different system on what it was run on first, and if ya have to play that areas you have to pay them, there is even a game or 2 from EA (? not 100% sure it's them) that your serial key is only valid for something like 6 months and then it expire, and it's on original sales, not second hand. You pay them only to play a set amount of time then your game that you bought becomes "pirated" and useless, except if you pay for a second & 3rd & 4th serial. But me digress
Also most of the gaming companies that was around during the beginning of the Computer games era isn't around anymore. And of those that is still around only about 5-10% of them really cares about their old IP's. Nintendo used to shutdown or send C&D letters to anyone who hosted NES & SNES roms, but about 2 years ago they ceased doing it and now focus only on their DS and 3DS romz.
Todays Gaming Companies is more "scared" of second hand sales & piracy of their new games than worrying about a old "crappy" game that ran on the ZX Spectrum (of which only 10-15% of the library isn't made freeware by their creators).