Ook The Iso Zone sluit nu zijn deuren

RDJ134 17 augustus 2018 om 21:43 uur

Sinds twee weken is Nintendo bezig met een heksen jacht op website die ROMS aanbieden van hun twintig en soms zelfs dertig jaar oude games, want opeens hebben ze een probleem mee. Normaal DMCA ze een website om hun content te verwijderen, maar de tactiek is nu harder geworden en krijgen beheerders van ROM en ISO websites nu gelijk een rechtszaak aan hun kont. Hier door sluiten er vele grote bekende website en gooide vandaag The Iso Zone ook de handdoek in de ring en sluiten de deuren. Helaas zullen er nog velen gaan volgen vrees ik.




Hi folks,

We thought we would issue a statement regarding speculation so everyone has the full picture.

First of all, we would like to address the elephant in the room:

Copyright Infringement

Copyright infringement laws vary from country to country, but the premise in a nutshell is that copyright infringement is the cause of monetary loss or damage to the copyright holder.
With retro gaming, there are no ways of purchasing the games - let alone the systems to play them on - in a way that would still generate the copyright holders revenue. None whatsoever.

This is why retro roms have always been a grey area. The distribution of their works, although frowned upon, were never actioned against as in a court of law that is what they would have to prove - Monetary loss or damages. And they couldn't - Because it's simply not true.

Trademark infringement is also another story, however we were also pretty strict when it came to this - as per our list of restricted trademarks. We had this in place long before many retro sites started panicking.

HOWEVER - That stated - Times are changing. There are now growing ways of obtaining these retro titles through avenues which DO benefit the copyright holders and it seems clear due to recent events, that there are a lot more avenues in development.

This is why we decided to throw in the towel of our own accord. It was a good ride and it was a just ride, however it is clear that in the not so distant future, distributing retro titles could be a serious case of copyright infringement.

That doesn't mean they will get it right though - Chances are they wont. We have ideas on how the archiving of retro titles and the pleasing of the copyright holders should be done and would love to pursue it eventually.
We think the webmasters of retro rom sites should come together and work with the copyright holders. It does not have to be this hard - And criminals should not be made out of passionate enthusiasts.

Take Spotify for example. Spotify has dominated the music industry and they started with scene release MP3 files. Their affordability, selection and ease of use then pretty much stopped all serious cases of online music piracy.
The similarities are astounding. It's time there was a happy medium like Spotify for retro gaming.

Moving on...

We would like to explicitly state that we are not re-branding or moving, despite the general consensus.
There is a new project underway by retro gaming enthusiasts to rebuild our original archive. And we wish them well.

Thanks for playing!
TiZ

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