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Bir çeviri sorunu bildirin
Well, if the original copyright holder provides those ROM versions of their games its a bit different then a user using their own ROM copies.
Because lets be real, while its legal to use a ROM version of any game you purchased on a emulator, barely anybody really rips their own copy to use with a emulator.
Which is the only way its legal. Instead they download a copy from the net from some website and that is explicitly not legal again.
Sega owns the license to those games and thus they are licensed by themselves to do so. Any more than if Nintendo was to emulate game using the same methodology which is how all their eshop stuff works. They own the IP, they own the hardware.
Same thing. SNK owns both the IP as well as the hardware specs for their own platform such as the NeoGeo pocket. Same as Nintendo, Sega etc. as such they are free to use the bios or code base for the stuff they own
I could list more publishers selling NES, SNES, GB, GBA, games legally on Steam. Iridion and Iridion 2.
That is their IP. Nintendo doesn't own it. While it may be an considered a ROM and on some kind of emulator, they could easily modify it to run with out code owned by Nintendo. On the flip side, Nintendo has to get rights if they wish to distribute the game as they do not own the IP, only the system it was built to be used on.
There also may be additional clauses in their contracts allowing use of Nintendo's code in latter games.
They may also not be ROMs, but ported over. I've never picked them apart to find out though.
It was remove because Nintendo's found some lines of their proprietary code. It can come back if they remove the code and fine a workaround. They can legally make an emulator, they just can't use proprietary code of the manufacturer to do so.
Someone already linked a video about it in a previous post.
I didn't say they didn't get DMCA'd by Nintendo. I actually agreed that they did.
I stated the reason why Nintendo submitted the DMCA and how the developer of Dolphin can get it back on Steam. They just need to remove the proprietary code and find a work around for said code. Submit it to the judge and they will get an OK to place it back up on Steam and distribute it again.
No. Nintendo filed a DMCA claim to remove the emulator from all sites where the developer made it available, not just Steam.