I’ve adopted a policy of always ebetering my password wrong the first time.
It started by accident.
I’ve adopted a policy of always ebetering my password wrong the first time.
It started by accident.
AppleTV: you wanted to watch this movie, that’s great, it’s on Amazon, BellTV, and Crave
Open any of those apps and it’s only available outside my subscription and I have to subscribe to some weird ass TV channel I’ve never heard of and didn’t even have their own app.
I like GoG because I can download an executable and load it into wine, which is less easy with steam for Mac. Though they make that harder these days than they used to.
I know the Mac isn’t ideal for gaming but I don’t want to buy a whole other computer and have to deal with KVM and monitor switching just to play games that were released in 2004.
Why couldn’t they just subpoena RCN’s logs for this data? Picking a single user and trying to get all their information for an unrelated case is a violation of their rights, unless they’re suing that user individually.
I’m not a lawyer but I hope the judge comes to the same conclusion.
Otherwise, I might sue Walmart and to do so I might need to info of their customers.
Thanks, that all makes a lot of sense.
To me just asking for the key alone seems fine (I’m not a lawyer, but other tools like open transport tycoon and other tools do that), but advertising how to get those keys as you said will probably over the line, and advertising it as posting Nintendo titles more so.
Thanks for providing all that info, I was aware of some but not all of that. Is my understanding that just providing the emulator without keys correct? Besides the keys themselves and the switch OS, there’s nothing that bypasses copyright. It does seem like from the other comments here that the devs may not have kept a clean separation which will now bite them.
It doesn’t matter, it’s legal to create emulators and plugins for interoperability.
Yuzu cannot distribute switch games, nor distribute Nintendo software, but it can emulate the console.
They can’t swipe your password if it’s wrong
They could of course enter it on the target website and see it’s wrong though, so this only works against the crappiest phishing attempts