2024 will be known as the year of the return.
Short answer, no. Long answer, also no.
You need to defend patents and trademarks, else you lose them. You don't have to protect copyright- works you create are yours, indefinitely (creator's life plus 70 years plus some company still exists plus whatever BS Disney comes up with next). Piracy certainly doesn't involve the first two, at all.
If Japan's IP laws are f'ed up, it's because it supports "holders" too much, enables patent trolls and gives corporations too much power.
No. The only case where you can lose "IP" (a deliberately misleading term that lumps together several completely unrelated legal constructs, none of which are property) is in the case of a trademark being diluted to the point that no reasonable person can be expected to know it's a trademark. Things like heroin, trampoline, escalator, dumpster, dry ice, etc. That's it. Copyrights and patents, which are different things from trademarks, aren't lost until they expire.
This is a troll account above, just a PSA before anyone thinks they're going to be able to engage in thoughtful debate
Feel free to fuck off, then
You realise this is satire?
I just read it. I canāt even see a game mentioned. What are you going on about?
Satire is usually based on real lifeā¦
Nintendo cited Tears of the Kingdom in their lawsuit. Not in the article.
Ok. But the article is satire. The reason Nintendo sued is obviously not to enshrine peopleās name for game preservationā¦ thatās the joke.
Nintendo also didn't sue every single person involved in video game preservation. Thatsthejoke.jpg
The "community reaction" you're referring to doesn't exist. People by and large are saying "no surprise, they did it while the console was still on sale, and they tried to make money doing it".
Wrong comment my guy
You were exactly the one I meant to reply to. You're criticising what is clearly a joke as if it were a real position and inventing controversy with a scarecrow argument.
They didn't criticize it at all. Pretty sure you replied to the wrong person.
The Onion
The Onion
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