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It has nothing to do with discord. ANY website will release that info upon request from the courts. There is no such thing as Internet anonymity... Every website knows your IP address that you are connecting from and your IP can be traced back to you.
It just requires a valid court order for the ISP's to release that info,
When you visit ANY site they know what IP address you have, its required to be able to access a site, they have to know it to send you data....
https://www.pcworld.com/article/444226/your-ip-address-who-can-see-it-and-what-you-can-do-about-it.html
Its not remotely secret or confidential. The only thing that can't be gotten without a court order is who that IP address belonged to which the ISP is the only one who knows that.
https://www.pcworld.com/article/444226/your-ip-address-who-can-see-it-and-what-you-can-do-about-it.html
All nintendo is doing is asking for the data on someone who committed a crime. Your rights to privacy are suspended when you break the law....
Nintendo is the same company that attacked Twitch streamers for playing their purchased copies of Hyrule Warriors: Age of Calamity, even though the game was out by that point and there was no law being broken.
They are also the same company that even now attacks YouTubers that discuss Pokemon, most of whom don't even show any copyrighted content, but instead are merely discussing it.
Apparently, that bloody First Amendment is overrode by Japanese law. So, I guess some greedy old Japanese company gets to control what you may or may not say, worldwide.
Heck, it's the company that says it's illegal (as bad as piracy) for a player to play a game with a self-imposed challenge (like a nuzlocke).
This is the same company that wants to make fanart illegal.
Sure, throw your constitutional rights away.
Yeah, we can thank a few semi-recent politicians for that.
Stripping away tech companies legal protections and rights.
Why should a company be able to harbor illegal activity?
That's the law that's being applied. It would be the exact same is someone was distributing CSAM or instructions to create illegal weapons.
Oh, and Nintendo didn't say that about Nuzlocke, a Pokemon lead said that.
What illegal activity?
Twitch is perfectly legal, no matter how much Nintendo wants to make it otherwise.
The streamers were using their own, lawfully purchased game, and Nintendo decided that no, they get to decide the law.
And with YouTube, last time I checked, free speech is not owned by a greedy Japanese company.
"A pokemon lead said that", yeah, and Nintendo owns and produces it. Nor did they reprimand the guy for speaking wrong.
Hence, Nintendo said and backs the statement.
(Considering how much they like to make everything linear, and remove any and all speedrunning techniques for no reason, that sounds about right)
Stop defending corporate greed.
I know it is a art book and all, but that is like putting game roms online of a unreleased or new game and thinking that is fine to do and it is not.
Are you not stingy about your IPs?