- Joined
- Mar 11, 2025
- Messages
- 445
- Level up in
- 55 posts
- Reaction score
- 1,157
- Points
- 1,977
Idiot was pretty much asking for it. Dumbest pirate on the planet.
thisIdiot was pretty much asking for it. Dumbest pirate on the planet.
Yep it can get worse but not necessarily. It fundamentally breaks Copyright Infringement but in certain cases the company can make a case on early-release of the product did hurt their potential sales, it was considered a corparate theft, it ruined a company's trade secrets, it was a severe attack on what a Nintendo legally can protect and all so Nintendo could easily persuade the judge that he broke 8 additional rules in related aspect of law that is basically related to how a company can legally make a fair business, and then additionally to Copyright Infringement he would be forced to pay how much potential profit he made Nintendo to lose and additional money for other rules he broke and it can take millions. But then if the victim cannot pay that much so Nintendo would end up getting nothing Nintendo known to ask thousands when they could ask millions. In this case Nintendo didn't dilly-dally and reduced their own expenses and didn't pursue further likely because he couldn't pay that much so they settled with "good enough" money and called it a day lol.Well, if the games were not even released... I suppose the crime can be considered worse, because he possessed and streamed some proprietary software not still in the market, so, basically almost an industrial theft... because he probably monetized those streams (meaning he was doing money from that "exclusive"). And that is another level than streaming old games.
Anyways, the boy seems to be not very smart not going to the court, and probably the judge did the best he could for him.
"in certain cases the company can make a case on early-release of the product did hurt their potential sales"Yep it can get worse but not necessarily. It fundamentally breaks Copyright Infringement but in certain cases the company can make a case on early-release of the product did hurt their potential sales, it was considered a corparate theft, it ruined a company's trade secrets, it was a severe attack on what a Nintendo legally can protect and all so Nintendo could easily persuade the judge that he broke 8 additional rules in related aspect of law that is basically related to how a company can legally make a fair business, and then additionally to Copyright Infringement he would be forced to pay how much potential profit he made Nintendo to lose and additional money for other rules he broke and it can take millions. But then if the victim cannot pay that much so Nintendo would end up getting nothing Nintendo known to ask thousands when they could ask millions. In this case Nintendo didn't dilly-dally and reduced their own expenses and didn't pursue further likely because he couldn't pay that much so they settled with "good enough" money and called it a day lol.
Yep. Recently Nintendo has been very angry and dilly-dally sues people just to make an example of what happens to people when they fuck with Nintendo, and Nintendo operates like a legal international terror organization with yakuza mentality who have a very good legal team covering their ass lol. It is said that Nintendo recently plan to take down some rom websites that shares any pirated copy of their game. They even attack modders and fan artists like a rabid dog.Yeah, that's the point. I don't think the stream of that guy was "that" popular to make some damage, but that could be a real situation if Nintendo just let anyone do the same (downloading pirated pre-released games and streaming them) over and over.
I assure you Nintendo has no care to have a "good company" image. All the image they care about is "I won't let anyone fuck with me" so if the teen is rich AF they would pursue to take millions from the teen's parents, if not his granma, even from their aunt lol. They literally see legal strike as part of their business to make money and they are so glad their mindless cult floats them up and popularises their rubbish so they can sell their rubbish consoles and games, and this popularity begets many opportunities for people to break laws against Nintendo so they can sue them to make more money.they don't want to hurt their "corporate image" destroying a young person