France Agrees With Spain In Saying Modding Nintendo DS Is Not Illegal

from the good-for-them dept

We had just recently written about how a Spanish court had ruled against Nintendo, saying that a company making “flash carts” for the Nintendo DS — basically alternative cartridges that can be used for non-authorized games — was not breaking the law. The ruling basically said that since the flash carts extended the utility of the Nintendo DS, it should be allowed. The reasoning is that Nintendo should not be the only one who can extend the functionality of its devices. This was a nice surprise, but not a huge surprise, since Spain has a good track record of reasonable copyright law decisions.

However, what is surprising is this story, sent in by a few folks, with reader “Sauce” getting it in first, noting that there has been a similar ruling in France, the inventors of the infamous “three strikes and you’re out” form of copyright law. The court there seemed to have a problem with Nintendo purposely locking developers out of its device, and even suggested that it should be required to be more open to developers, like Windows. Fascinating to see European courts recognizing the rights of individuals to have a “freedom to tinker.”

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Companies: nintendo

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Comments on “France Agrees With Spain In Saying Modding Nintendo DS Is Not Illegal”

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28 Comments
Sheinen says:

Moose

Slightly different…m$ have said you can Mod it all you like, but you can’t then use it on live. Which is fair to the point that it prevents hackers from cheating and fucking up everyone elses good time.

I really don’t think games fall in to the movie/music catagory of ‘should be available for free as a hook for alternate revenue.’ The games take a fuck load of people several years to make and provide up to 30+ hours of gameplay…I’d say that’s pretty worth the asking price.

Plus the ‘alternate revenue’ would fuck it up – you’d have to pay for each gun upgrade, costume change, new level, individual live tournaments, there’d be advertising in game everywhere…actually that’s not far from the truth now…

Chronno S. Trigger (profile) says:

Re: Moose

“Slightly different…m$ have said you can Mod it all you like, but you can’t then use it on live. Which is fair to the point that it prevents hackers from cheating and fucking up everyone elses good time.”

It would be one thing if they just did that but they are also removing functionality of the Xbox when it’s banned. There are things that can be done strait out of the box before connecting to live that cannot be done after the ban.

There are so many reasons to buy the real version of the game and I have no problem with people getting banned from XBL for pirated games (Banned not bricked, pirated not backed up), but pirating games isn’t a problem for the Xbox. How many games, one after another, have broken that first day sales record? First Halo 2, then Halo 3, then GTAIV, now COD MW2. Piracy should be the last thing on developers’ and Microsoft’s minds. In fact, it should be the last thing on Nintento’s and Sony’s minds as well.

interval says:

Re: Moose

“I really don’t think games fall in to the movie/music catagory of ‘should be available for free as a hook for alternate revenue.’ The games take a fuck load of people several years to make and provide up to 30+ hours of gameplay…I’d say that’s pretty worth the asking price.”

But its not a question of what you think, (BTW, I agree with you, but…), its a question of what the market will tolerate. You create the greatest whiz-bang gaming system and the coolest action game ever, or the greatest film, or the best music tracks, but if people won’t buy them, FOR ANY REASON, be it changed in technology or what have you, but you still want to create these things (you poor sap, you should have gotten you PhD in Chem), you really don’t have a choice. You need to create value beyond the creation.

Anonymous Coward says:

In the U.S. no mods are allowed.

The DMCA make sure of that.
If you bypass or “circumvent” in any matter you have to hope and plea for forgiveness because the guy who put the protection scheme in place even if the protection is lame have the power to make your life miserable.

ACTA probably would transform this in a global law.

cc says:

I’ve “modded” my DS with just such a cartridge, and the reason is homebrew, not piracy — it’s *my* DS and I want to be able to do whatever I like with it (and ARM assembly language is pretty cool!).

In the Xbox case, even though I’ve never cared to own one, what I find unacceptable is that Microsoft had a “backdoor” that allowed them to download and run code on the consoles without the consent of the owners, and the code checked the hardware and sent back data about *specific* consoles so they could be banned. I don’t care if they did it to stop piracy or to stop cheating, I just don’t like how they did it.

Richard (profile) says:

Re: Re:

All hardware should come with full software SDK so that anyone can program it. This is in the company’s interests.

We bought a full lab’s worth of PS3’s a little over a year ago but they are now bricks from our point of view. The graphics hardware is not accessible to program (unless you pay megabucks to become an official developer) and without that they are no better than the PS2’s we had before (in fact they are worse). So now our students will not be taught to program them and all the Sony studios will continue top complain that they can’t get enough programmers!

Marcel de Jong (profile) says:

It's not modding

It’s not modding in the technical sense. Because the actual hardware isn’t modified. Those cards you put in the DS don’t harm the hardware at all, they work just like a regular game, the producers only retrieved the security codes that Nintendo placed on the DS-cards in order for those cards to run.

If Nintendo was smart, they’d release a card that would allow for homebrew software to run on it, but not the ‘illegal’ ROMs. That way they can point to that, as an “approved” alternative.

El Guerrero del Interfaz (profile) says:

Logical

Here the lobbies behind the laws that forbid this kind of stuff in the US are not so strong then there.

On the contrary the big content lobbies are not only strong but friends of the government, so the 3 strikes stupidity. But that’s changing: instead of the usual know-nothing consensus, there’s infight in the socialist party over the 3 strikes thingy, not everybdoy aggrees 🙂

Marcel de Jong (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:2 Logical

Unlike the brilliant capitalistic system they practice in the US. Where it’s every man for himself, if you can’t make it on your own, for whatever reason, you’re destined to go down in debt.
Except when it comes to big businesses, which are “too large to fail”, so they need financial help from the government, to help them pay their exorbitant bonuses on the backs of the hardworking Americans.

Marcel de Jong (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:2 Logical

You sell something, you lose ownership and control over that something.

If you sell me your rare stamp collection, I could use it to send letters, and you can’t do anything about that.

If I buy a games console, it’s MY property, and I can then modify it, to suit MY needs.
If I want to gut my Wii and make its housing into a tiny garden… Nintendo has no legal legs to stand on to stop me.
If I want to add a little tiny chip to the Wii so that I can play homebrew games, Nintendo doesn’t have a say in that matter as well, as it’s MY property. I did not rent the Wii from Nintendo, I bought it at a store.
Same holds true for the DS, in that case, I don’t even alter the hardware, but instead use a software cartridge to play homebrew games. I bought the DS, and I bought the cartridge. That cartridge can indeed also be used to play copied/illegally obtained videogames (roms), but that doesn’t mean the cartridge itself is illegal.

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