Nintendo sues America's dumbest video game pirate

By | May 14, 2010, 7:07am PDT

Summary: Is it any wonder Nintendo’s attorneys did a collective, “Oh, no. He didn’”?

It’s not unusual for game console makers to use the legal system to protect their games and intellectual property. It is, however, unusual for a game pirate to be this stupid.

Yesterday, I discussed how Supreme Court nominee Elena Kagan might be a supporter of fair use. Now, Yahoo! is reporting that Nintendo is suing a particularly dumb video game pirate.

Before I get into the details, let’s talk about video games and fair use. Fair use (depending on interpretation, of course) allows owners of media to have a limited degree of freedom in use. For example, fair use says you can buy a book and then give that book to a friend. Fair use also says (again, depending on interpretation) that you can make a backup copy of a video game you purchased.

Little Jack’s reign of destruction

I’ll give you an example of where this makes sense. I have a friend. Let’s call him Stan. Stan has a little four-year-old boy, Jack, who makes Conan the Barbarian look mellow. One of the few forms of entertainment that will calm Jack down is the Finding Nemo Xbox game for the original Xbox.

The problem is Finding Nemo’s mean time between failure when in the presence of Jack can be measured in nanoseconds. We’re not sure what superpower this child has, but on various occasions, the game disk has been found broken, covered with some noxious substance, somehow actually bent into a curve, had a chunk bitten out of it, and embedded three inches into the drywall.

After buying a few replacement copies of the game, Stan decided to make a backup copy of the disk, his right according to fair use.

When Jack outwitted his dad for the 20th or so time in a single month, Stan then decided to rip the game disk to his Xbox. There were two ways to hack the old Xbox back in the day: opening the box and installing a add-on board or following an arcane series of steps that would do the same thing without voiding the warranty.

Stan bought the board and voided the warranty. Technically, he was violating Microsoft’s terms of service, violating the DMCA, and probably committing piracy. But the fact was, he’d bought and paid for the Xbox and bought and paid for something like six copies of Finding Nemo.

If fair use was invented for anyone, it was for Stan. He wasn’t harming Disney (makers of Finding Nemo) or Microsoft. He’d bought the products fair and square.

This sort of semi-legal backup has existed in games and movies for years. The vendors aren’t thrilled, but they generally don’t fight hapless dads like Stan.

But then, there’s NXPGAME of Queens, New York.

Unfair use

NXPGAME was asking for it. According to the civil lawsuit filed by Nintendo, the console maker tried to resolve this amicably. Oh, they really, really tried.

NXPGAME sells game copiers that let users download, copy, and play copies of DS and DSi games. These are essentially backup devices — except, you know, they make it easy to play pirated games.

I went to Archive.org and looked up what NXPGAME.com was offering. Back in 2008, they sold add-on memory cards, hacking cards, and replacement parts.

Console vendors don’t like vendors like this, but this isn’t where NXPGAME went off the rails. Oh, no. It gets better.

Apparently, Nintendo’s legal counsel contacted NXPGAME and after a sequence of conversations and letters back and forth, the operator of NXPGAME agreed to shut down his site and stop selling game copiers.

And he did. NXPGAME shut down and ceased operation.

But then, the owner of NXPGAME decided to tempt fate. The guy decided to launch a new Web site that was identical to the old site.

It gets worse. The former owner of NXPGAME.com redirected people who came to the URL of the site he’d agreed to shut down to the new site.

And yet, it gets worse. Not only did the guy go back on his agreement with Nintendo, he plastered the new Web site with Nintendo-owned trademarks.

So here you have a guy who ran a shady business and got caught. He does a deal to prevent any further trouble with a $15 billion dollar company and then not only goes back on his word, but both points people to the new site and swipes Nintendo’s trademarks.

Is it any wonder Nintendo’s attorneys did a collective, “Oh, no. He didn’”?

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David Gewirtz, Distinguished Lecturer at CBS Interactive, is an author, U.S. policy advisor, and computer scientist. He is featured in The History Channel special The President's Book of Secrets.

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David Gewirtz

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Biography

David Gewirtz

In addition to hosting the ZDNet Government and ZDNet DIY-IT blogs, CBS Interactive's Distinguished Lecturer David Gewirtz is an author, U.S. policy advisor, and computer scientist. He is featured in The History Channel special The President's Book of Secrets, is one of America's foremost cyber-security experts, and is a top expert on saving and creating jobs. He is also director of the U.S. Strategic Perspective Institute as well as the founder of ZATZ Publishing.

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RE: Nintendo sues America's dumbest video game pirate
efsane Updated - 11th Apr 2011
Well done! Thank you very much for professional templates and community edition
sesli sohbet sesli chat
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my take
TardHugger@... 14th May 2010
All I got out of this is Stan needs to grow a sack and teach Jack to respect his belongings

Here's his hug.
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RE: Nintendo sues America's dumbest video game pirate
Timpraetor Updated - 14th May 2010
@TardHugger@...
Bingo - However, might it be better for Stan to take his child outside to the playground instead of parking him in from of a TV set? Oh, I forgot, parents don't have time for their kids anymore, that's what the TV is for.

Oh, and it was good info on the stupidity of some people. In this case, I hope big business (Nintendo) wins and takes NXPGAME to the gallows. A perfect example of "Natural Selection".
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RE: Nintendo sues America's dumbest video game pirate
D. W. Bierbaum Updated - 15th May 2010
@Timpraetor
Don't forget all those icky pedofiles lurking around outside, ready to snatch children the second your back is turned.

I think this single mindset of "keep 'em inside, where it's safe", is the major cause of obesity in children, even more than high-fructose corn syrup in beverages...

I have no opinion about the piratidiot
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Stan & Jack
nigebj 14th May 2010
All I got was that Stan has more money than sense. "You broke the game, don't break the next one or there won't be any more. By the way, the next one comes next month, not tomorrow!". But that doesn't keep Jack quiet while Stan is watching TV I guess ...
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@nigebj

I promise you, without a doubt, that I can keep Jack quiet and make him obedient.
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Wordy
MoeFugger 14th May 2010
That was so wordy that I did not even read to the end.
Try just getting to the point.
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You have the attention span of ...
croberts 14th May 2010
... a twitterer? Tweeter? Twit.
@croberts I know that's not where you were going with it, but it needed to be said.
@croberts They didn't get the jest of this story because they were too much like Jack and the idiot who got sued by Nintendo! lol.... but hey criminally minded people always think they'll be the last ones to get caught. So ignore the Lessons this story has to teach!
of what you purchase they should have to replace the disks as many times as it is needed or allow the copying of the disks. That is what is fair. You Most people make the copies and store the original so that when the copy gets destroyed they can make another copy and not loose what they had purchased. But since that is now illegal the manufactures should be forced supply the replacements no matter how many times they have to replace it. That way they know it is not piracy but they would also have to cover shipping and handling. OOps i just found a reason to let the people make a back up didn't i.
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Oh?
Grae1923 14th May 2010
@MoeFugger

Well, I enjoyed the read and had no problem with the length.
(Joke: How many books do you read a year? How many pages are in those books on average?)
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wordy for sure. Stan, Jack???
pupkin_z 14th May 2010
@Grae1923
this is a technical news site, not a web-site for failed authors of the next "War and Peace" trying to shape up their talent...
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@pupkin_z
Actually, this article needs to be a tad longer and/or more detailed.
@Grae1923 None, and none. Do all my reading online now. Get my news and entertainment via Twitter.
Seriously, I've read the entire Harry Potter series, out loud, at least twice. (Not to many many times as much of other fine stories). Maybe Stan should try that?

Maybe then his kid will grow up with enough attention span to read an entire 744-word article before commenting!

(I'd have said this in the earlier msg, but it wouldn't have fit the tweet format).

My problem with the article is that the connection between the pirate and fair use is rather tenuous. Game copiers don't have much to do with fair use. About the only link is the trademark use -- which may, in fact, be fair use!

One could even argue that the pirate wasn't being stupid, but just gambling in an effort to save his business. (At least, not stupid in the sense of this article. Are spammers stupid? Even if they get rich?).
@Grae1923: Better yet, ask him how many pictures the book had happy

No kidding about Stan. "Sorry kid, take better care of your stuff".

== John ==
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Your Style
ctunk 14th May 2010
I am sure you think you are whimsical, witty, and funny but that had to the most difficult read of my life. The story could have actually been intriguing by telling the facts..........Nobody needed the fake "Dad" in the middle and the moral dillemmas he faces with his son and his video games. You do have quite the imagination!!!!!
@ctunk don't forget, most writers get paid by the word, or at least have a minimum word count to meet.
@ctunk Then stop reading if you don't like it. Why complain?
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Yeah when I was 4 I took much better care of my Video Games. Of course they were Atari 2600 and not much I could do to them.

I'm all for fair use and backing up your own stuff. Is there the potential for piracy? Sure but just the same as any other media.
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"that had to the most difficult read of my life."

Don't go near any translated German theology texts. Bultmann would give you a stroke.
In the early '70s MOS Technology offered the 6500 and 6501 microprocessors, dumbed down versions of Motorola's 6800 processor. That is until Motorola sued for IP theft -- heavilly denied by MOS Technology, and the former Motorola employees who were founders, until a photograph of the 6500 microcode memory was displayed in court showing the Motorola logo and mask serial number that had been used to create the 6500 chip. Now you know why Apple used the 6502! (and the rest of the story)
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Some people are just too stupid ...
Sorry, don't have anything.
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Agreed
klumper Updated - 15th May 2010
Agree with Seanferd. I'm all for whining when and as it applies, but come on. You don't have to walk in lockstep with David's every view, but to criticize his writing style? On his own blog? Pffft. If that's the best you got, don't tune in to his posts. Talk about modern day, attention deficit disorders.

Fact is, he's kinda unpredictable and fresh. And that beats stale and dry - like most tech schtick is - any day. [Sometimes you gotta know when to get creative or rumble a little, ya know?]

Message to Gewirtz: Keep up the good work mate.
I wish I lived in whatever country this was written in. It's not the best interest of the consumer that the lawmakers of the US care about anymore. These days the only thing they care about is "Big Business". Back when the constitution was written, I'm sure copying games to protect an investment would have been legal, but not today.
@The literary critics. If you're not published, and I don't mean in the Penny Saver, then shut up. Just stop reading and leave the commentary out.

As to the article itself this NXPGAMEs guy was asking for it but, fair use is going to be put under more and more strain as more media moves to a digital format. The example given of the book works fine when you actually have to give the book to your friend. It gets tricky when you give your back-up copy of the e-book to a friend. Now the author sold to one reader but gained two, not the sort of deal I want to be on the bad end of. The fair use laws are going to have to be reexamined and redefined eventually.
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Not such a ficticious scenario
Dr_Zinj 14th May 2010
I know kids, and parents of such kids. I won't go so far to say that their kids are mentally dumber than a bucket of dirt, and I won't say their parents have too much disposable income; but there it is. I can say, "Thank God!" I didn't have them in my Scout Troop or I'd have unfortunately strangled the little darlings.

It's really too bad that Nintendo didn't just purchase NXPGAME outright, and turned it into a paying service. The legitimate need for the products exists and offering such a product would have made prosecuting infringing products even easier.
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Sounds to me like NXPGAME sold products that facilitated the 'fair use' of Nintendo users to make copies of their games. The 'add-on-board' that the absentee-father Stan installed into his machine was probably purchased from a company similar to NXPGAME.

While the owner of NXPGAME may be a *********, I really don't see where Nintendo gets off asking someone to shut down their business when they are selling products that can be legitimately used to facilitate fair use.

The argument that such businesses should be shut down because their products are primarily used for hacking is foolish and sophomoric. A gun can be used to commit a crime, but the majority of time it's purchased for security and self defense (legitimate purposes). Shutting down a gun store for selling something that *could* be used in a non-legitimate way is just plain stupid.

In fact calling this guy a pirate is also stupid. There is nothing in the article about *him* pirating games. He's just a hardware seller FTLOG. If there's something more to it, then fine, but based on the facts in this article, there's no piracy going on. You state that Nintendo 'really, really tried' to settle their dispute amicably, but do not say how. For all I know they could have threatened to kill his cat (j/k). They are asking someone to stop selling legitimate products because *they* don't like the fact that they could, possibly be used to pirate something.

My question would be this: Did they offer him some sort of compensation to cease operations on his business to did they attempt to bust him chops. If the former, shame on him for starting up again. But if the later, Nintendo has alot to answer for and I hope they crash and burn.
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RE: Nintendo sues America's dumbest video game pirate
rageagainstcomputer@... 14th May 2010
Little boy breaks game, game is forever gone. Respect the games your father buys you or get a whuppin'.
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Dinks like the author of this rile me
blueskip 14th May 2010
"NXPGAME was asking for it. According to the civil lawsuit filed by Nintendo, the console maker tried to resolve this amicably. Oh, they really, really tried."

Uhmmm... NO they didn't. They got someone that YOU call shady to shut down a legitimate site and then he reopened it. The only thing he did wrong was using their trademarks. Big friggin' whoop. Ok take down the trademarks. Otherwise STILL legit. IT IS LEGITIMATE TO MAKE A COPY OF YOUR OWN GAMES. SELLING OR GIVING AWAY COPIES OF THOSE GAMES TO OTHERS IS VERY MUCH WRONG AND ILLEGAL!! This guy made the equivalent of a tape recorder. Get over it and go back to school in a non-commie school. I think everyone in IT has just completely went off the deep end. Did you guys just learn math and science in school? Apparently you all failed learning how a FREE society works and basic rights like stay out of my mail, and off of my phone, and out of my house etc.
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Where does this leave us?
sfaid 14th May 2010
If these companies want to play the BIG BROTHER Card then they need to pay too.
You buy a game.
You register it with BIG BROTHER.
You Copy it all you want.(NO Copy Protection).
OR BB is responsible for replacing when you ask.
You loan it to whom you want. (One at a time).
You lose/someone steals, BB tracks that when you report.
How? I have no clue!
Maybe go back to Dongles that have a unique SN encoded.
Let them daisy chain so you can have 20 or more attached to your device at a time. One year in jail for having an illegal Dongle. Life in Jail for producing illegal Dongles. BB Replaces failed Dongles for free or shipping only with return of defective one.
Oh heck with life in jail, it costs tax payers too much. Off with their heads!
Wow, you can really stretch an article. Good skill.
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Contributr
RE: Nintendo sues America's dumbest video game pirate
David Gewirtz Updated - 14th May 2010
happy
Nice writing. Nice article. Nice analogy. Nice opinion. Nice conclusion.

But hey, we all have opinions, and we all can draw our own conclusion, right? Many of us seem to doubt the honesty of your writing, and most of our conclusions are antithetical to your own. But...again...we all have our own opinions...
I'd like to tell you what I think about your article, but first., back in my day, we had to use crowbars to take the lid off of our computers, which were hammered shut using a shovel with snow on it. My little friend, Huber, took his computer case off and voided the warranty...
Well I enjoyed the story, even brought a smile. I suspect that all those geeks that didn??????t, did so because it brought back bad memories when they were Jack.
$50 for something easily scratched yet devalues regardless.
@HypnoToad72

You think the R4 is for making legitimate backups? My friend, it does not. You find the roms and it allows you to play the downloaded roms on the DS as any emulator would.

People started to download ROMs even when catridges were available. But wait, the DS uses catridges...
I'm pretty much sure that's "oh no he di'ent!", phonetically speaking. Fly right.
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but it is a common action.
magallanes 15th May 2010
It is not so strange to find a guy that run a business then close it and open with a new name, legally, if you are doing it right, it count as a different business.
Some companies do it in a more subtle way, for example to change the name from "CRIME INC". to "HOLDING C LLC".

I am member from a "mostly legal" russian site (i.e. pirate site), the site was raided some months ago then the site was closed. But now, they managed to change the domain name, they are doing the same business with a different name and it is legally acceptable.
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Comic references?
AllKnowingAllSeeing 15th May 2010
Stan, Jack, Conan the Barbarian...?
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Hum?
FastEddie1960 15th May 2010
If technology wasn't technology we wouldn't advance to the next level...If you purchase a ford and retrofitted with a Toyota engine and sell it a your on hybrid Well so be it !! We all should be allowed on the freedom act to engineer and sell anything we come up with!!
I have to agree with most of the other posters, selling the equipment isn't piracy and if you wanted to stretch the analogy, what about the circuit board makers whose parts are in the machine? Or the solder suppliers. It goes on.
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I'm all for fair use. And I understand the argument about backups and Sony v Universal Studios with regard to Betamax. But there has to be a line. And it has to be dually reasonable.

A lot of us want to decry how greedy businesses are, but what about consumers? While the movie and music industry argued against creating copies of movies and cassettes, the scale of piracy on those mediums was far different than now. You had to physically purchase bootlegs. Now, from the privacy of your home, you can have 400 GB of torrented music, movies and software in less than a week.

Maybe they've over reacted. Maybe not. What would you do if it was your music or movies? Honestly? I'm trying to think of proactive ways to answer this question.

I think part of the problem is an entitlement attitude. I hear this twisted argument that things cost too much, so I'll get it my own way, as if it is a right to own what someone else's R&D paid for. If we hate how big companies produce things, then the way to act against it isn't to take it for free, but to boycott it. But it seems that that is not palatable. Personally, I don't listen to the radio anymore. But I will legally download or purchase a song from Amazon.

On the PS3, if you download a game, you can download it on 5 units or 5 times. There is DRM free music for $.79 and even less per song.

So honestly, what are viable options for mitigating unpaid downloads for these companies, while recouping production and R & D costs? I like the PS3 method where a purchase warrants several downloads, from 5 - 10. What do you think?
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Well done! Thank you very much for professional templates and community edition
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