Sony Dismisses Claims Against Playstation Emulator 146
Gridle writes "According to this CNet article, Sony has voluntarily taken back the patent infringement case against Connectix, the makers of Virtual Game Station, a Playstation emulator for Macs and PCs. Here's the press release from Connectix."
Expectations (Score:2)
If VGS can do it, and now even legally, why aren't there thousands of slashdot monkeys at thousands of computers writing software to turn my $2000 computer into a $100 game console?
Re:Hmm.. (Score:3)
Re:PSX obsolete (Score:1)
Re:Slightly misleading article... (Score:2)
No, it's not stupid. They were obviously hoping that a lot more of those allegations would stick. When only 2 of them did, they decided that it wasn't even worth pursuing that case. They are planning on trying something else with another suit against Connectix.
Re:Pros and Cons for Sony (Score:1)
Re:Timing, and cost, maybe? (Score:2)
I also doubt that the point of Bleem! for Dreamcast is to sell to people who already have Playstations.
In conclusion, Sony sucks.
If they ever get the Micros~1 style monopoly they want over video gaming, expect games to show the same high level of quality and originality as Windows shows stability and security.
Conspiracy Theory (Score:1)
Bungie's Halo was Steve Jobs' flagship evidence to the computing world that the Mac was a viable gaming platform. Microsoft's recent purchase of Bungie makes Steve Jobs look like an idiot. I'm guessing the deal will go down like this:
(Apple already dumped Game Sprockets. . . hm)
Apple will announce that it is dumping Quartz, and replacing it with some bastardized DirectX-based technology from Microsoft, and Halo will be available for Mac - but behind the scenes, MS has ripped out the guts of Halo and replaced them with DirectX so it will run on XBox, and the only easy way to port it would be to port DirectX to Mac.
Won't that suck?
If it ain't broke, fix it 'til it is!
Re:PSX obsolete (Score:1)
Re:Sony (Score:1)
Re:PSX obsolete (Score:2)
Of course, TransMeta CPUs should do the emulation must faster, but they have CLOSED that part of their architecture ...
Re:Hmm.. (Score:1)
Hey, shit! I gotta get me over to the patent office PRONTO!
If it ain't broke, fix it 'til it is!
Re:8 bit nintendo? (Score:2)
NESticle is one emulator, and there are a bunch of others.
-Dave Turner.
But bleem is awful (Score:1)
Re:GameBoy (Score:1)
Re:Not obsolecence; marketing (Score:1)
Re:More details from Connectix CEO (Score:1)
Here I feel I should speak out briefly. There is a difference between having lots of useful features, and actually *working*. Both Office 98 and IE5 have excellent features that are to be found nowhere else, so I use them a lot.
However, little things can get in the way: create a large-ish Word document (over 10-15 pages), add a table, and it almost invariably screws up the document, even to the point ot crashing the computer. And IE5 *doesn't* send the "Refresh" command properly to a proxy - which is pretty fucking vital for a browser.
There are many more examples of this kind of behaviour in those 2 applications. MS can often have great ideas. But it's implementation is seriously fucked up.
And now back to the scheduled program...
- Oliver
"exp(i*Pi)+1=0" - Euler
Re:Slightly misleading article... (Score:1)
That's a stupid thing to say. If 7 of the 9 allegations were tossed out, that means 2 of them were not tossed out. I don't know too much about the law, but I believe it's fairly standard practice to throw a whole plateful of allegations and see which ones stick. After all, it's the court's job to decide which ones hold water and which ones are just dumb, as they did in this case.
To answer the question of why use an EMU (Score:2)
Here are my answers:
1. It usually does cost more to buy a console than an emulator.
2. By the time the Emulator is complete usually PC hardware is up to date to play the games better than the original console.
3. Consoles break, PC's do as well, but over time, it's easier to keep the PC alive as when something breaks you can just upgrade it to the latest and greatest.
4. Some emulators are freeware which would theoretically mean that anyone could attempt to program a game. It's tough to do that on a console without the proper software.
Re:Slightly misleading article... (Score:1)
now, if they'd come up with a psx2 emulator (which would be nigh-impossible now, but give them a few years), it would be a different story.
Re:First direct result of this... (Score:3)
C'mon! Any one else do this? Don't tell me you haven't!
A sensable move. (Score:1)
One thing I have always noticed about Sony is they are fairly "hip". They are up on modern business strategy as well as technology. I would expect this suit to disappear entirely.
-Effendi
Re:First direct result of this... (Score:1)
Isn't it funny, though, that wine ran the program better than WinNT itself? Use that against your microsoft lovers!
Re:Timing, and cost, maybe? (Score:1)
If you don't know/care about the details, how can you profess to have any opinion at all?
-CZSorry, but closemindedness == idiocy in my opinion, and therefore renders anything you may have to say completely worthless.
They withdrew suit so emulators stay illegal... (Score:1)
This is therefore, a Bad Thing.
Re:PSX obsolete (Score:1)
The ultimate "F-U Sony!"
They should put a little sticker on the package:
"It's a Phony!"
If it ain't broke, fix it 'til it is!
Re:Sony playing dirty legal games? (Score:1)
Yup (Score:1)
Sony is suing on the grounds of theft of intellectual property. They own the intellectual property required to write the emulator, and therefore can sit around writing emulators for their own stuff until the cows come home.
They are attempting to stop anyone who does not have license to use their intellectual property from doing the same.
PSX obsolete (Score:1)
Re:More details from Connectix CEO (Score:3)
Reverse engineering has always been a hot topic. The issue comes down to what exactly was done. The ethical (and I believe legal as well but IANAL) litmus test that has generally been accepted is the black box idea--you treat something as a black box--info goes into it and then info comes out of it--and you make something that performs exactly the same way without actually looking into the box. My understanding was that Connectix (with previous experience in emulation software) was very careful to do it this way and could prove they did it this way. The Sony lawsuit was not about winning, but rather about pushing back the release and slowing sales of the Connectix product. It worked, and with the PS2 out, they'll probably do the same thing again.
As an aside, thankfully Compaq reverse engineered the IBM PC ROM using the same "black box" technique and helped launch an industry and change the world (tough to admit for a Mac lover).
Re:Hmm.. (Score:2)
No. A court found the copyright infringement claims invalid. Sony has voluntarily dropped the patent infringement claims, suggesting to me that they probably weren't valid either---if they did have a valid patent claim they have lots of money for lawyers and they could easily win. This is pretty much what I'd expect for a clean-room reverse engineered product: any overlap with Sony's intellectual property would have to have been the result of chance; that's pretty unlikely.
Here's a laymans rundown of what various forms of intellectual property traditionally protect: Trademarks protect a particular name or logo that distinguishes a company or product in the market. This case has nothing to do with trademarks. Copyrights protect the particular expression of an idea. Patents protect a particular implementation of a functional idea (i.e. an invention, defined quite narrowly by how it was implemented). Trade secrets protect all sorts of things, but once the cat is out of the bag they provide no protection at all. The real issues here were copyright and patent infringement.
Smart people trying to produce an emulator would have poked through the Playstation and documented the interface for games without describing Sony's patented algorithms or providing any of Sony's copyrighted code; then a separate team would have written an emulator to the specification without even looking at a console. (i.e. the clean room reverse engineering mentioned above). Barring a massive coincidence, this pretty much guarantees that they don't use any of Sony's IP.
Regarding your own hypothetical product, anyone is free to make a product that does the same thing, so long as it doesn't borrow from your particular implementation. Thus _all_ people can profit from their own particular ideas and innovations, including emulator companies.
Countersuit! (Score:1)
--
Slightly misleading article... (Score:4)
The article at the link sure didn't read that way to me. It sounded like after losing seven out of their nine issues at court, Sony decided the cost of the lawsuit didn't justify the chance of winning. After all, their executives refused to comment; if they had been doing this out of a sense of "right", naturally they would have hyped it up into a big PR thing.
In conclusion, Sony remains evil, but at least the forces of evil have been held at bay... for now.
Re:meaning of property (Score:2)
Notice that land ownership is a strange concept - in what sense do you own land? Do you own everything beneath the surface as well? How far? Land is already an abstract concept very different from, say, a saw or a hammer.
Thus if one uses your definition, we own very few things, perhaps even none at all.
I would argue there is no such thing as a "natural right" or entitlement. All rights and entitlements are rules that have been developed by humankind over thousands of years. Rocks, trees and animals do not have rights. While information ownership might be different from ownership of physical objects (but perhaps not so different from land ownership (btw most land used to be the property of the local ruler or king)), the property rights for information fall within a certain pattern of development. As law and society reached a certain stage, copyright became necessary to encourage innovation and to ensure stability.The distiction between ownership and copyright is purely a matter of terms. Copyright is the idea of ownership taken to a new domain.
Re:A sensable move. (Score:1)
Just my take on it.
-Effendi
Re:Ninth Circuit Court of Appeal (Score:1)
Why? (Score:1)
Re:First direct result of this... (Score:3)
Start with a G4-based enterprise server (not the Macintosh)
Install LinuxPPC
Run Mac-on-Linux
Run the RealPC emulator for Macintosh
Install a lilo dual-boot of Windows and Linux on that
Within the Linux partition, run Wine on VMWare
Within Wine, run VGS.
Half measures never got us nuthin! :)
Re:Impact on DeCSS (Score:1)
If thats the case, it shouldn't apply. Connectix black-box reverse engineered it as opposed to hacking on a Playsation to see what it does.
Re:Nope. (Score:1)
Re:Sony covering it's own a$$? (Score:2)
I guess its hardware emulation then, rather than software.
Re:Timing, and cost, maybe? (Score:1)
The topic was more of the timing and cost issue, and not about the details of the lawsuit, so I was trying to stay away from it, and my original intent was to encourage others to not talk about it on this particular thread.
Still, I think what I meant to say didn't come out right. It looks like I worded it in a way that sounded stubborn and ignorant, and took away from what I was really trying to say. Apologies.
Re:Timing, and cost, maybe? (Score:1)
The topic was more of the timing and cost issue, and not about the details of the lawsuit, so I was trying to stay away from it, and my original intent was to encourage others to not talk about it on this particular thread.
Still, I think what I meant to say didn't come out right. It looks like I worded it in a way that sounded stubborn and ignorant, and took away from what I was really trying to say. I shall be more careful in the future. Apologies.
Re:Sony covering it's own a$$? (Score:1)
Re:Sony covering it's own a$$? (Score:1)
Re:More details from Connectix CEO (Score:2)
Re:Hmm.. (Score:1)
"The methods are irrelevant." I nearly laughed so hard when I read this. The methods are all that are protected by patent law.
Emulation is not illegal, you dumb ass. Using images of the device being emulated, without owning that property, is illegal.
Get your facts straight before responding in a hostile manner to a person who knows what he is talking about.
Re:I thought it was open... (Score:3)
Just my thoughts on the matter.
Re:I thought it was open... (Score:1)
Re:A sensable move. (Score:2)
Re:Slightly misleading article... (Score:3)
I love some of the anti-corporate spew you see at Slashdot. The "slightly misleading article" article will sound as it was written, and as the reader intends it. The written word (unless very artfully done) is always open to interpretation.
After reading the articles again, I'm sure you'll notice:
"Sony executives were not immediately available for comment."
- This doesn't mean Sony refused to comment; it means that C|Net didn't want to wait around for their replies before the posted the article.
And who held the "forces of evil" at bay? Certainly not Connectix, or the Federal Courts - Sony *chose* to drop the case. So who, praytell, stopped the Evil Sony in its tracks?
Why is Sony evil? Because they want to protect the market for a product they make? Because they want to make sure people aren't ripping off products they own?
-lw
smart of sony ... (Score:1)
Re:Timing, and cost, maybe? (Score:1)
Re:Timing, and cost, maybe? (Score:1)
Put yourself in their (Sony/game-maker's) shoes... I'm sure the game-makers want their products to have the labels, packaging, game content in the correct language, right? I'm sure they would want their customer service staffed correctly, and their webpage, commercials, and on-line store updated and deployed as well... Okay, so most people would probably agree that customer service is a joke, and that you'd rather have the game *now* vs. having the correct documentation... but to them, it's their bread and butter. They would want to present it the best way they can, so that it will do well. The last thing they would want is for 1 million copies of their games making it to the US, but everything written in Japanese... And the phones start ringing...
So... while I admittedly don't know if Sony is truly evil or not (hehe), using the above scenario, I can understand why the game developers would support, (if not demand/plead) that Sony create country codes and limitations...
Okay, so now that I've given my "oh well, we have to be fair" statement above, I will, for the record, say that yes, it sucks to have to have two PSX's in order to play Japanese and US games hassle-free. (by hassle I mean mod-chip, stuff not working, etc..) The cost of two units is not what bothers me.. it's the fact that I could just as easily just have one unit, and half the cables running around... LOL. Alas...
Re:Nope. (Score:1)
Here's how it goes:
1. Sony is selling playstation units at a loss, to earn money from selling the games.
2. Connectix starts selling an emulator. This has two effects:
a) Sony gets to sell less playstation units (lose less money) and
b) Sony gets to sell more games (earn more money).
The question was simply: why are they pulling a law suit against something that they could earn alot of money from?
Re:Timing, and cost, maybe? (Score:1)
Don't bitch if you don't want to take both sides (Score:1)
Granted, I don't support reverse-engineering and stealing proprietary routines (and don't bother to correct me, as I don't know/care about the details)...
Strike 1. Proprietary routines were not stolen. Proprietary hardware was not stolen. Pheonix clean roomed an IBM compatible BIOS. That's why PCs are cheap and Macs are expensive. Or should we all be driving Fords in Black only?
Honestly... do you know anyone who decided to buy the emulator over the "real" unit? Maybe you do, but I, for one, don't.
I bought one. Thank you.
If you're going to spend $30-$50 on an emulator, you might as well go spend $89 at your local Target/Wal-mart and get the darn unit - no compatibility issues, etc... Most of the folks
who have the emulator already have the PSX, and they still buy all the games.
You'd pay 90 for something you get for 30. Well folks, the new math is in.
Sony Is a 4-letter word (Score:1)
Re:Slightly misleading article... (Score:1)
If you're talking about walking out the door, then if no one escorted you, you'd be leaving voluntarily. If you were escorted, you'd be complying. If they dragged you kicking and screaming, you'd be resisting.
-lw
About the NetYaroze (Score:3)
Save a life. Buy more cheese.
- Naerbnic
pedantry (Score:1)
McCoy, n'est pas? As in "the Real McCoy".
Dorks (Score:1)
Re:Timing, and cost, maybe? (Score:1)
IOW: I feel the say that I feel and I don't care if I'm a baby who is basing my opinion on nohting factual. Leave me and my little dream world alone.
Re:Ninth Circuit Court of Appeal (Score:1)
LK
Re:Slightly misleading article... (Score:2)
Yes, that's true. If my boss told me I was fired, I would still be leaving "voluntarily", unless he hit me over the back of the head with a sap and dragged
Perhaps a better analogy. You screw up really badly at work and know you will be fired, so you quit first. Looks better on the resume.
Re:Slightly misleading article... (Score:4)
And who held the "forces of evil" at bay? Certainly not Connectix, or the Federal Courts - Sony *chose* to drop the case. So who, praytell, stopped the Evil Sony in its tracks?
Seems like the court did have a lot to do with it. The judge threw out most of Sony's case. So, Sony *chose* to drop the case because they'd already lost most of it and they realized they weren't likely to get anything out of it anymore, so it didn't make sense for them to keep fighting it to the bitter end. That just costs more money.
They will apparently be pursuing a separate patent-infringement case though. And Connectix is, of course, trying to have that one tossed out as well. Guess we'll have to wait and see.
Why is Sony evil? Because they want to protect the market for a product they make? Because they want to make sure people aren't ripping off products they own?
It depends on their reasons for suing. If they truly believe that what Connectix has done violates the law, then they're probably right to sue. If they're doing it just to cause problems for Connectix, then they're evil. It seems that with 7 of the 9 allegations being tossed right out, they probably didn't have much of a case.
Re:Why? (Score:1)
Re:PSX obsolete (Score:3)
Re:More details from Connectix CEO (Score:2)
True, but Connectix makes great emulators for MacOS as well (VGS and VirtualPC). I imagine that MS will make X-Box games work on Windows, but I'm not so sure they will go after the MacOS market (it *is* possible -- there is money to be made from Mac users, and MS does make some very decent Mac software (Office98 and IE 5)).
If Micosoft isn't interested in supporting games on MacOS, perhaps Connectix can step in to make that work.
- Isaac =)
Re:Timing, and cost, maybe? (Score:3)
So, like I said. He feels the way that he feels and doesn't want to let the facts, or reality, get in the way.
what you said, in other words, is: I feel it is my duty to define what other people mean by their statements and pass arbitrary judgements on them.
That's pretty much it.
LK
Re:meaning of property (Score:2)
Information is the same in that respect. We can't both share _precisely_ the same piece of information. But unlike tangible stuff, information can be and is trivially copied all the time. When you read a book, you do not move the information from the book into your mind. A copy of the information carried in the book is made in your mind; the book still has all the information it ever did. Tell me what the book said, and now I get a copy as well.
This is the sort of thing I'm talking about with how the universe - which as far as this debate is concerned is basically just us Earthlings (property law on Planet Claire is irrelevant) - works.
-----
As for the traditional requirements for ownership go (these are legal requirements AFAIK - I didn't invent them myself) you're missing the point.
Let's say that Alice lawfully owns a car. It is illegal to hit people with it. This doesn't mean that Alice does not own the car. It doesn't mean that Alice doesn't have the ability to hit people with it. It means that it is illegal to hit people with it. Alice's ownership of the car is never in question.
Remember, I didn't say that you could only use or enjoy or restrict or dispose of things lawfully in order to own something. As a practical matter, you may be compelled to forfeit your property when using it in an illegal manner.
Obviously this doesn't mean that you never owned it to begin with, but that as either a punishment or a corrective measure Alice's future ability to exercise rights over some piece of property have been taken away. Acquiring property in a manner that violates the previous owner's property rights is also illegal, and as a matter of course, includes the return of the illegally _acquired_ property.
So Alice owns all kinds of stuff. And there's nothing preventing her from doing whatever she wants with it. But there may be repercussions from some uses that effect her continued ability to freely exercise her rights.
That's what I'm saying here, and to my understanding that's basically what the law says. IANAL, and I'm sure that there are many fine points involved but I don't think that it flips the entire thing over.
As for land, yeah, you own everything in an ever shrinking wedge down until the center of the earth, IIRC. The ownership of air and space is a newer issue however. And because sometimes property rights may conflict with each other but the means of resolution are generally not brand new here. (e.g. if I own property which is completely encompassed by your property, you are required to grant me access. This infringes on your right to exclude me from your property, but if you could exercise that I would be unable to exert ANY right over my own property. The encompassor imposes the greater burden on the other party; it's less of a burden for him to relent)
-----
Natural rights exist. I'm not talking about mother nature (trees and rocks? please) but the state that people exist in when there are no laws other than physical ones like gravity. But you have to remember that the existance of a right doesn't necessarily preclude other people from infringing on it. The best strategy so far imho appears to be to restrict the exercise of your rights just enough to preserve as many others intact as possible. It's more an art than a science though.
But let's consider your thesis. If there are no natural rights, then Alice, who is alone in the woods is incapable of saying whatever she wants? This is clearly untrue. Thus freedom of speech is a natural right. Unfortunately it does not carry with it a defense against those who would infringe on that right - Bob threatening Alice with bodily harm if she speaks her mind. And that is where laws are introduced.
But copyrights are fundementally opposed to the natural freedom of speech. If Alice gives a speech, there's nothing in the absence of law or threats from others that prevents Bob from repeating it word for word.
Copyrights were developed which prevent Bob from doing so without incurring the possibility of punishment. But the clearly stated objective of copyrights (in the US anyway) is to encourage Alice to give many speeches that Bob wishes to repeat. This is frequently overlooked.
Copyrights are an incentive for Alice. They are limited in a number of important ways because it's more important for Bob to be able to repeat Alice's speeches than for Alice to have absolute control. Unfortunately our carefully developed and rather fair system of copyrights which has evolved over the past ~200 years has been unconstitutionally corrupted by moneyed interests.
Anyway - the intrinsic requirement that information be copied, rather than transferred is what makes it impossible to own it.
*If I compose a poem in my mind, I can enjoy it. I can satisfy the first requirement.
*If I want to let someone listen to the poem, I can do that and fulfill half of the second requirement. But I can't compell them to give it back or to forget it or stop thinking about it in some manner which I dislike. I can't fully exercise the second requirement.
*I still can't dispose of it (i.e. willfully forget it) and can't own it. This is a limitation of how humans work. But I can't fulfill the third requirement either.
_This_ is how I can't own information. And this is why copyright law doesn't claim to confer ownership of information. If it did, we'd call it something else. Copyright rather clearly indicates that it is an exclusive right to copy.
A more accurate definition would be: An exclusive (but not sometimes, or under some circumstances. and only for a limited time anyway) right to copy.
I haven't said that copyright is necessarily bad. I think that it can serve a purpose, but presently is in need of significant reform. But it's not ownership, and it's really important that people understand that. I hope that I've managed to convince you. It's NOT just a matter of terms.
Re:Slightly misleading article... (Score:4)
Not anymore. According to this C|Net piece [cnet.com]: "Sony said today that it has refiled a suit against Connectix alleging that the company's software that allows PCs to run games developed for the PlayStation violates Sony patents. A Sony representative said the company dismissed its lawsuit a day before a hearing in the case on the judge's advice to avoid "procedural issues that may have been appealable.""
So, Sony it's at it again. We have to restart this whole
Read the whole story - it the games, dummy (Score:3)
Sony is huge player in the games title business (er... I mean content). They didn't see the logic of going to court and pissing off a bunch of game evangelists all for the sake of preserving a low margin aspect of their business - the HARDWARE end when they could just coopt and force more games through the channel. Games is where they make the real money cause you invest to get the first one and then each next copy takes a few bucks to make, distribute and sell. Consoles are expensive to make, hard to ship, get returned....blah blah blah.
And anyway does emu run as well as a console? or is a BIG company like Sony banking that slow performance will motivate folks to switch to a console. And what about PS2?
Re:Slightly misleading article... (Score:2)
Well the Playstation was a loss leader if I remember right. They made most of their money from games and the emulators just opened up another area for people to play Playstation games so really this wasn't done to make sure people weren't ripping them off.
I know I don't like Sony because of their part in the DeCSS fiasco as well as their strong arm tactics for demolishing smaller competition.
There are reasons why the anti-corporate sentiments are raising up. Corporations are given the same rights as individuals and then are given some that normal people don't get, like getting bailed out by the government without any adverse affects or not having taxes.
On top of this it is the corporations, not the government, that is trying to take away all our rights and freedoms. The laws were passed by the government but the corporations are pulling the strings and have the control. I am biased but do you want our world run by entities whose existence values a dollar higher than a human life?
Molog
So Linus, what are we doing tonight?
Re:Why? (Score:2)
Well, 7 of their 9 allegations got tossed out, and from what the article says, it looks like they're going to file, or have already filed, another case against Connectix.
Connectix CEO comments... (Score:3)
Nope. (Score:2)
They probably are cutting losses (Score:2)
More details from Connectix CEO (Score:5)
He mentions that a key point is that the technique of reverse engineering was completely cleared, opening the door to creating PS2, Dreamcast, and even X-Box emulators in the future (once PC hardware speeds are capable of it).
- Isaac =)
Atari is the Answer (Score:2)
Re:PSX obsolete (Score:3)
That, and they were getting their a?? kicked. Most of the patent disputes were already rejected by the courts. This was just the last nail in the coffin of the Sony lawsuit.
Hopefully, when "VGS2" comes out, they will not waste their time. After all, the PSX2 has lots of crunchy features that make it a nifty living room appliance, but the typical PC owner who already has a DVD player will have little reason to bother with the platform unless there is an emulator... and Sony makes the big money on the games, not the player.
Re:Pros and Cons for Sony (Score:2)
Interesting - I heard that if your hardware was good enough, then the resultant emulation was actually much better than what the PlayStation hardware could give (in terms of resolution & such). I haven't tried it myself (yet), but that's what I heard.
Sony Refiles! (Score:2)
Re:meaning of property (Score:2)
Re:meaning of property (Score:2)
We are not Locke. We inherit a rich political tradition that has, in part, been built around the rights and processes his ilk won. But here we must make a distinction about what we mean when we say what law "is for".
On the one hand, its purpose is quite clearly as suggested; to wit, to secure and maintain public order. To preserve property, as Locke put it. That is why law can exist in the most tyrannical regimes; why we find it in many societies, regardless of the rest of their political structure.
But in another, real, and more important sense, law exists to secure justice. It is no accident that we call our system of laws "the justice system". And though the implementation and even design of those laws often fall short of ideal, the assumption of justice is the engine that drives the system. It is the only thing that legitimatizes it.
In that sense, one must ask whether the current crusade to defend intellectual "property"(*) is actually just and whether the legal system should be pursuing it as strenuously as it is. By the twisting of the concept of "property", rights holders are also twisting the legal system into an engine for their self-enrichement regardless of whether the result is just or even whether the terms have been ratified by common usage. ---
(*) Intellectual "property" is to property as fool's "gold" is to gold.
GameBoy (Score:3)
I know you're joking, but I've actually become quite entranced by the GameBoy platform recently. It's simple, VERY well documented, and lots of free tools exist for developing for it. Nintendo doesn't seem to be too annoying about shutting down emulator and reverse engineering projects, too (they even released a game "Harvest Moon" recently, which was developed by amateurs). And best yet (in my view) no high-3D-flashiness/low-gameplay!
If you yearn for classic gaming and a reasonably open platform, grab an emulator (rew) and assembler (rgbasm) and check it out!
Re:A sensible move. (Score:2)
Impact on DeCSS (Score:3)
Re:More details from Connectix CEO (Score:2)
-Dave Turner.
Re:Hmm.. (Score:2)
Someone was once describing the art of writing patents to me. The idea is basically to make the patent wording broad enough to cover all future derivations of the patent, but at the same time not cover anything that had been developed before. Apparently, the most profitable patent ever written was for the first word processor and was something to the extent of "A program that tabs across the screen and fills in the blank spaces."
I can't say this is true, since I heard it second hand, but this basically covers all forms of word processors (word, wp, etc) and any other form type programs. I guess at the time, all other programs didn't follow this same flow of tabbing across the screen, so they didn't fall under the patent application. If this is true, some serious bank must have been made.
Re:Slightly misleading article... (Score:2)
--
Obvious why sony backed down... (Score:2)
Re:Impact on DeCSS (Score:2)
Re:PSX obsolete (Score:2)
Other than that, though, I'm sure the psx2 will whoop up on my pc.
Sony refiles patent suit against Connectix (Score:2)
So, this wasn't a victory at all, it's an illustration of some of the more questionable aspects of the legal system. Apparently, Sony can keep trying until the get the lawsuit right, and force Connectix to waste more and more time and legal expenses on it. Imagine you were being sued and the company bringing the lawsuit could just file it again and again.
What about 'bleem!'? (Score:2)
Sony covering it's own a$$? (Score:3)
So, Sony has made an emulator for PSX. If Sony won the lawsuit and forbade Connectix from writing an emulator, then can Sony legally write an emulator for the PS2? I know this sounds silly, but can anybody dispute this?
8 bit nintendo? (Score:2)
Hmm, then I need to read the rom in the cartridge, too . . .
Re:Hmm.. (Score:5)
As for the MS/DOJ thing, it is not about patent infringement or IP. It is about predatory monopolistic practics at MS.
Also blockquoth the poster:
A patent does not guarantee the right to make a profit from an invention. It does not guarantee the right to an exclusive market due to an invention. It does not prohibit others from fulfilling the same need you've chosen to address via the device patentned.A patent does prevent someone else from implementing a solution in exactly the same way you do. In other words, I can't simply duplicate McCormick's reaper, but I sure as heck can come up with my own device for harvesting grain. It is not the concept of rotary blades that is patented; it's the particular form that is protected.
Admittedly, the federal courts and the PTO have really murked the waters by allowing software and "business model" patents (egregiously wrongly, IMHO). But even they don't say "MS patented Word, so no one else can make word processors" -- even ones that read Word files.
--- (*) Intellectual "property" is to property as fool's "gold" is to gold... It can't be "stolen", although one's rights vis-a-vis it can be infringed. Current usage is a deliberate obfuscation to play on the connotations of "theft".
Sony playing dirty legal games? (Score:4)
Also note this occured 1 day before they were set to present their motion to dismiss (they being connectix). To me, it sounds like Sony is suing, causing trouble, then dropping the case before there's a chance for resolution. In other words, they're grinding on them without ever allowing the court to actually settle the issue, costing Connectix money and making people question the viability of the product, just using money on lawyers to make trouble. Maybe connectix should have had the right to seek a summary judgement on the matter to prevent such abuse. (or at least a right to continue a day and have their motion heard)
Pros and Cons for Sony (Score:5)
The biggest drawback for Sony that I can see is that a game running on the Sony emulator (in my experience anyway) isn't as good as when it runs on normal PSX hardware. I suppose that someone who had never seen a PlayStation before and tried playing Soul Blade on their Bleem emulator might think, "Boy, Playstation games aren't all that good."
Another more dangerous (but perhaps less likely) potential problem is the fact that maybe these console companies could steal each other's publishing deals. Suppose to make Tunnel Raider V for the PSX, it'll cost me $5/game in royalties for Sony. Suppose Sega offers me a better deal -- say, $3/game -- to make the "Dreamcast Bleem Emulator" version of the game (which, totally by coincidence, happens to run on the Playstation as well). That could really screw over Sony. I don't think it's a particularly likely scenario, but it's possible...
Of course, most of this is a moot point now that most people are looking forward to the PSX2, which is probably the real reason why Sony isn't continuing their legal battle.