Re: Now what?
Posted by DerpySnake on .
Depends how they distribute it, I think. If it's actively released in other countries, I'm pretty sure they have to follow their laws.
Even if N owns the legal rights to the emulator code (and will torch people forking or deriving from it), there's lots of smart people, unlike before.
They'll figure out the pieces and recreate it. Maybe after the Switch gets buried though.
What I wonder is: there's countries that allow drm-breaking (France). If the new emulators are created in a legal-friendly zone, can companies go after them as easily?
They'll figure out the pieces and recreate it. Maybe after the Switch gets buried though.
What I wonder is: there's countries that allow drm-breaking (France). If the new emulators are created in a legal-friendly zone, can companies go after them as easily?