Yes but different games can use different vfilter values, here are some examples
DonkeyKongCountryReturns,NTSC-U,SF8E01,04041010100404
MetroidOtherM,NTSC-U,R3OE01,08080A0C0A0808
MarioKartWii,NTSC-U,RMCE01,07070C0C0C0707...
How many pirated copies is 1 life worth, and what percentage of those pirated copies would have otherwise been purchased in an alternate world where Yuzu emulator doesn't exist?
1709819686
The reason you believe that is because it hurts...
I think the Obtaining Keys part is incorrect. Yuzu did endorse a method to obtain these keys, they even have a guide on their website how to use Lockpick_RCM. Guide in question...
Interesting, I wonder whether that would be legal. I suppose there are multiple issues here:
1. Do we own the information on our own devices?
2. Did Yuzu's speech cause significant financial harm to Nintendo? Is their company in...
Well, perhaps at least we can take comfort in the fact that Nintendo didn't actually win the case, so there is no legal precedent being set here. All that happened was Nintendo threw its financial weight around to get the outcome it wanted.
There is absolutely nothing untoward about making a for profit emulator. That is not illegal, and never was. As for the keys, it is ultimately the user who has to circumvent copy protection and extract one from a device in order for the emulator...
In other countries if you lose the case you have to pay legal fees to the defendant. This would have a chilling effect which imo is desirable given that it's better to let a guilty person go free than hurt an innocent person.
edit: I guess it's...
Just got done watching it and the key takeaways appear to be:
1. Emulators can be legal and devs can even legally use the console's BIOS in development of the emulator, but cannot include the BIOS in the final product.
2. Dolphin is almost...
That example is completely wrong and disingenuous. you know that Nylon used to be Trademark but it lost it because it was to widely spread it couldn't be used as a trademark anymore, right? (not a source, but a quick example can be found on this...
Why not tho? I mean if I design a combustion engine I don't think others can make copies of it - the design is still my intellectual property.
YUZU devs: "But we see now that because our projects can circumvent Nintendo's technological...
This is all sorts of odd. Didn't the supreme court used to say that emulators were all in all legal, like when Sony tried to sue the creators of Bleem? (source)
How much money did Nintendo threw at them to overrule that? Don't they realize that...
I don't understand this decision. Does this mean anyone who makes an emulator can also be sued? Wasn't there a previous case where emulators being found to be legal? I thought emulators were legal as long as they don't contain any intellectual...