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Forums - Nintendo - Nintendo Wins "Groundbreaking" Mod Chip Court Case

Nintendo Wins "Groundbreaking" Mod Chip Court Case

Nintendo awarded around $9.5 million in case against mod chip seller.

Nintendo has won what it describes as a "groundbreaking copyright case" against a large-scale seller of mod chips, flash carts, and game copiers like Sky3DS and Gateway 3DS.

The Japanese publisher was awarded around US $9.5 million by a Canadian federal court, reaffirming that the distribution of these "circumvention" devices is illegal.

The defendant, Jeramie King, ran a business called Go Cyber Shopping, which sold "large quantities" of the devices, Nintendo said in a press release. The chips allow users to illegally download Nintendo games, violating the company's copyrights.

As part of the verdict, King will be forced to issue an apology on his website.

"Nintendo has an established track record that demonstrates our resolve to protect our iconic characters and franchises," said Devon Pritchard, Nintendo of America's senior vice president of business affairs. "We will continue to protect the creative works of our developers and vigorously enforce our intellectual property rights against those that attempt to steal or misuse them."

Nintendo has been very protective of its property in the past. The company won a similar case to this one in Australia back in 2010, while a number of fan-made games--such as Pokemon Uranium, Pokemon Prism, and and a Metroid II remake called Project AM2R--have been met with severe opposition by the publisher.

http://www.gamespot.com/articles/nintendo-wins-groundbreaking-mod-chip-court-case/1100-6448529/



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Like that's going to stop anyone from modding their consoles.



VGPolyglot said:

Like that's going to stop anyone from modding their consoles.

and it's also not gonna stop nintendo from getting money from a case like this



katakpisang said:
VGPolyglot said:

Like that's going to stop anyone from modding their consoles.

and it's also not gonna stop nintendo from getting money from a case like this

I doubt that Nintendo are going to get even a fraction of what they won in court. The other party probably won't be able to pay the full amount.



Distribution might be illegal but is the usage?



If you demand respect or gratitude for your volunteer work, you're doing volunteering wrong.

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Hey Nintendo, at least people were buying your hardware to pirate the games on... Still people won't stop using these hacks and Nintendo just got more chump change.