The BLEEM! emulator went through court (vs. Sony) and it was determined that emus are legal.
It's possible, though, that some or all of the encryption-breaking stuff in MAME is illegal.
I read a book about Nintendo's business history. They have been in several lawsuits involving decryption, most memorably with Tengen. You guys in your late twenties, like myself, will probably remember that Tengen made a far superior version of Tetris and some other cool games for the NES that were not given the official Nintendo seal of "quality." Nintendo sued and, if I remember correctly, it came out that Tengen had used reverse engineering and were forced to stop selling games. Am I totally forgetting what went on there? There were also a couple of other game companies that were sued and I can't remember the specific details here at work. Also, I seem to have lost the book recently. It had Mario flying on the front. Someone correct me if I'm wrong. Have the MameDevs addressed these issues legitimately, especially with the recent decryption of the golf games and some other very profitable franchises (Tekken)?
Cheers,
KenToad
*Edit* 2 new replies while I was typing
Yeah, that makes sense to me, but, if you're arguing that this guy shouldn't sell Mame related merchandise and that guy shouldn't make an FE that passes coin count, how does that relate to Mame and the posterity issue raised by Haze?
Okay - look at this (fairly possible) scenario.
Guy makes FE that passes coin count.
Arcade operators build arcade emulator cabs using MAME and the new FE.
Namco sues arcade operators, FE author and MAME dev team b/c their Reunion game sales are sliding due to everyone using cheaper arcade emulator cabs with MAME and new FE.
MAME is found to infringe on NAMCO's rights (probably under the clause above) and all work on the project is ordered ceased.
Obscure bootleg board that Haze or Rb or other MAMEdev's were working on will never legally be decoded and documented, so posterity loses out.
Got it?
Tiger-Heli, so your argument is that Mame wouldn't be judged legal if it can be used in a commercial setting at all? The scenario you refer to is very debatable as to how simple it would be to implement right now. It seems like you guys are worried about the fuse on this bomb, blowing on it when you know it will explode at any moment. I support Mame wholeheartedly, but I don't accept the argument that it is not already an underground project. No users who support the continued development of this project want it to get any bigger, because they are afraid that it can be challenged at any moment. Given that reasoning, allowing the continued development of projects relating to Mame shouldn't be lorded over by anyone, least of all the developers of Mame, since the whole project is on shaky legal ground anyway.
I support this project. It just seems like some folks are justifying both ends of the debate, i.e. certain projects and/or commercial ventures shouldn't be allowed to continue because the advancement of accurate emulation must be allowed to continue, no matter that everyone seems to agree that many of the companies who own the rights to these boards do not agree.
Hope I didn't piss anyone off, least of all you, Tiger-Heli. I just want this argument to continue to develop. I think these are some of the most important issues concerning emulation today. I welcome challenges to my arguments and especially further info. I will check on the link you provided, Tiger-Heli, after I type this. Thanks for that.
Cheers,
KenToad