Tecmo sues Xbox hackers

Article posted at theregister
In the first case of its kind, a California video game maker is suing an entire community of software tinkerers for reverse engineering and modifying Xbox games that they legally purchased.

Tecmo, Inc., a subsidiary of a Japanese company, announced a federal lawsuit Wednesday against Mike Greiling of Eden Prairie, Minn., and Will Glynn from Davie, Fla, for alleged violations of US copyright law and the controversial Digital Millennium Copyright Act.

According to the complaint, Greiling and Glynn were webmasters of ninjahacker.net, an online forum dedicated to creating custom content and modifications for certain video games. Also included in the suit, filed January 21st in Illinois, are up to 100 anonymous users of the site, whose identities the company vowed to unmask.

"[W]e believe it is our duty to uphold the integrity of our work," said John Inada, general manager for Tecmo, in a statement. "Hacking of this kind will not be tolerated and we intend to take all necessary measures to protect our intellectual property."

The lawsuit claims the ninjahacker.net users decompiled the code to several Tecmo titles, including Ninja Gaiden, Dead or Alive 3, and Dead or Alive Xtreme Beach Volleyball, and figured out how to create their own "skins" that change the appearance of game characters. They swapped modding techniques and hundreds of custom skins over the website message board.

The defendants are not accused of pirating the games, and the modifications and methods at issue appear no different than those employed by hobbyists on other video games - from Halo to the Sims 2 --for years. But according to the lawsuit, Tecmo suffers in the practice anyway.

"Most of the skins posted on the Message Board by defendants show Tecmo Characters with appearances that are different from the original Tecmo designs," the complaint notes. "Several... are designed to make Tecmo Characters appear naked."

The harm isn't just to the wholesome values of Dead or Alive Xtreme Beach Volleyball, hinted Tecmo spokesperson Melody Pfeiffer. There's a principle at stake. "Hackers, if they're allowed to do this kind of thing, will be allowed to hack into any game, anywhere," Pfeiffer warns. "We spent millions of dollars to develop these games, and people are coming in and changing the code to their liking, and that's illegal."

Jason Schultz, an attorney with the non-profit Electronic Frontier Foundation, couldn't disagree more. "This complaint is absurd," said Schultz. "The law allows for fair use of other people's copyrighted works without any permission needed, and one of the key things that you're allowed to do is make copies in order to reverse engineer and understand how they work."

Everything the complaint accuses the defendants of doing is completely legal under well-established law, says Schultz. "If they'd offered a competing video game with Tecmo's code in it, it's a legal issue. But here, they have simply offered a way for legitimate game owners to modify how the game looks on their screen. Its like a home customization kit. It's not competing in any way with Tecmo's product. In fact, you have to own Tecmo's product to use this stuff."

Tecmo's Pfeiffer says the company is seeking $1,000 to $100,000 in damages for every custom skin swapped over the website.

"The key issue is going to be, do [the defendants] have the resource to fight back against a company that apparently has quite significant revenues," says Schultz.

A message on ninjahacker.net reports the site was taken down on January 25th, a few days after the lawsuit was filed. Greiling did not return a phone message Wednesday. In a telephone interview, Glynn said he hosted ninjahacker.net as a favor to Greiling, but that he had no other interaction with the site or its users. "Basically, I was hosting this website," Glynn says. "I don't own an Xbox and I wasn't into modding or skinning things."
 
Most other companies don't have issues with users who modify their games for their personal enjoyment e.g Bungie with Halo/Halo2

Some of these "illegal" (what a joke) customised skins can be viewed here
http://www.homegamers.com/doacentral/Gallery/GalleryNinjaHacker.aspx

Skins have been created for characters from Street Fighter, The King of Fighters, Darkstalkers/Vampire, Resident Evil/BioHazard, Doom 3, Lord of the Rings, Star Wars and Naruto.

I do feel for cypher, and hope that with the right legal representation he can get all charges dropped.

One of the points made by Tecmo was about defamation of character, implying that the sceners at NinjaHacker somehow give a bad name to and degrade the characters.

On a seperate note, check out the back of the game box for Tecmo game "Dead or Alive Xtreme Beach Volleyball", the word NUDITY appears on the box, and the opening scene leaves little to the imagination. Also check out some of the official Tecmo press advertisments from this source
You can download the "Play with yourself" trailer here

I would be interested to hear other peoples opinions on this issue.
 

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What irritates me the most these days,is the fact that you're so restricted for use after you BOUGHT digital content!! :mad:
I can understand their fear for piracy,but these days,everything is getting out of control...
If you buy a car,nobody will stop you if you change color or tune it to your own likings,as long as you don't touch it's technical specifications....
If you buy a house,nobody stops you if you paint it or rebuild it as long as you have the proper permissions....
Why can't they come up with something like that for some stupid piece of 50$-worth digital thingy??? :confused:
 
you can see whats comming next .... you may buy this dvd but you are not allowed to watch it :eek:

you may buy this game but not allowed to play it :eek:

you may buy this music cd but not listen to it :eek:

lol
 
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