What the fuck? Why? Why did they think it was a loosing? Clean room emulators are legal. Did Yuzu have some code from leaks in it?
@matrix Apparently it was due to cryptographic keys? Even though I thought yuzu required you to get your own?
@VD15 Yes, they didn't include any keys
@xianc78 @galena @matrix it also was clean room. They "stole" code from Ryujinx, allegedly. Patreon was only for new builds, otherwise you could build it yourself for free. I have seen nothing that alludes to them making patches for unreleased games, they have always claimed otherwise. TotK had updates only when it released.
Regardless none of that was what was actually in the suit. It was all about using keys Nintendo claimed were "illegally obtained" and yuzu telling people how to get those keys (ripping them from your own switch).
@galena Oh, that would make their case harder although it imo doesn't prove Nintendo's claim
@matrix ooooffff
I don’t fully understand the laws behind everything but my interpretation is that Nintendo are leveraging the DMCA to say “extracting your own encryption keys and copying your own owned version of the software” constitutes piracy (even if you paid for your own copies and you’re using this for personal use). Yuzu explained on their documentation how to do this which therefore means they are infringing on intellectual property. Them developing software to then use this dumped data to emulate games is more icing on the cake but is a consequence of that previous point. I think the only precedent cases are ones from before the DMCA was really abused like it is (so cases like Sony v. Connectix and Sega v. Accolade).
@matrix they aren't actually legal either. They are pretty much just a gray area that is protected by status-quo, at least in the US. Though I would think of the same being true in many countries.
In the US for example, there is a chance of a company like Nintendo losing such a case, which would be way worse for them than the current status-quo, which is why it took them so long to take legal action.
@juliangro Isn't there a precedent for clean room reverse engineering not violating copyright?
@matrix @juliangro tools for circumventing drm are illegal under dmca
@pomstan @juliangro They weren't circumventing drm though
@matrix @juliangro it's up to mr. pilpulstein in the judge's chair
Fuck no, they took out Citra too