Forum - View topicNEWS: Police Arrest Man for Modifying, Then Selling PS3s
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anddo
Posts: 670 |
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Free my boy the console is just about a billion years old and Sony isn't even supporting the damn thing.
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Somer-_-
Posts: 1019 Location: Canada |
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You can easily do this by yourself with just a usb lmao.
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Aca Vuksa
Posts: 643 Location: Nis, Serbia |
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Another arrested for modding the game, that's the worst thing i'd had ever seen.
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gridsleep
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Eco-fascism. Remember back in the '80s, the hack cartridges anyone could by anywhere here in the US? They were selling them on TV and in computer magazines. Japan is even more run by the dark lord corporations than America.
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Sven Viking
Posts: 1041 |
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I'd tend to be on the modder's side even for new consoles, but at this point it's quite possible a number of buyers were purchasing these to replace their failed PS3 just in order to play their existing legal PS3 libraries without needing to find and swap discs (and store them in a convenient location). With the PS5 announced and no backwards compatibility on that or the PS4, the PS3 is pretty-much a dead console until they release a PS3 Mini in a decade or two.
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Stampeed Valkyrie
Posts: 856 Location: PA |
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As mentioned previously Sony has either discontinued or is in the act of no longer supporting the PS3. I don't see the big deal here.
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hikura
Posts: 565 |
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It doesn’t matter if Sony doesn’t support the PS3 anymore. The point is a person was messing with a Sony IP and was profiting from it. That’s illegal. It’s fine if you don’t like it but should not be cutting anyone any slack.
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BadNewsBlues
Posts: 6281 |
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Not even for the fact that most developed countries don't have this kind of law on the books for tech modded in their country? |
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Commander Cluck
Posts: 123 |
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A lot of things in the 80s and 90s that were legal are now illegal. Big companies could make unlicensed games for old consoles without a care in the world. Laws are notoriously slow and constantly fail to keep up with fastly changing technology. Nowadays there's no way you'd be able to sell modified games and consoles in department store magazines or GameStop. Maybe a Mom & Pop store might but that's a risk on their part. Most of the ones I know don't deal with bootlegs/reproductions. It's also against most online seller's TOS to sell modified consoles and games like eBay. |
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hikura
Posts: 565 |
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There's a difference between modding something for personal use and modding something then selling that item. |
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BadNewsBlues
Posts: 6281 |
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Okay but here's the thing though NO OTHER COUNTRY HAS THIS KIND OF LAW ON THE BOOKS. This law even prevents the modding of game data, so yeah keep telling us how good this law looks on paper while everybody else shits on it. |
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hikura
Posts: 565 |
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There is a 177 countries that have trademark rights laws. My source is for this is this site http://www.inta.org/TrademarkBasics/FactSheets/Pages/InternationalTrademarkRightsFactSheet.aspx That is just one of the laws that man is accused of breaking.So you were saying? Again i personally don't mind if someone is modding stuff for their own personal use.Yes it illegal,But they are not proditting from it.The man in question was profitting from what he was doing, |
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Sven Viking
Posts: 1041 |
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Not the guy you’re replying to, but unless he was claiming these were official Sony-modified consoles I don’t think their trademark case against him makes any sense. Are you violating trademark by selling second-hand consoles or reselling new consoles on eBay? (No, just as eBay isn’t violating trademark law by using the trademarked term “PlayStation” in one of their listing categories.) What if you sell a second-hand Gameboy modified with a screen protector or decorative sticker? The type of modification shouldn’t have anything to do with trademark law.
He’s also not selling a knockoff product representing itself as a Sony PlayStation™. These are genuine second-hand PlayStations originally purchased from Sony. |
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AkumaChef
Posts: 821 |
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Generally speaking, there is nothing illegal about reselling a 3rd-party good--used goods stores are common worldwide, ranging from cars to books to video games to anything else.
And likewise (generally speaking) there is nothing illegal about modifying something and selling it either. If you think about it, that is what a massive number of businesses worldwide do. I am in the manufacturing business: I buy metal parts and I machine (modify) it into the shapes requested by my customers. A restaurant buys raw food and prepares (modifies) it into the dish that the customer requested. A good friend of mine has a business building special vehicles for the handicapped: he buys vans from Ford, adds a wheelchair ramp or lift, and then sells them. And so on. What's happening here is a particularly strict interpretation of an unusually worded copyright law. This is not a typical prosecution, and it's not even possible in most countries....which is why this is newsworthy in the first place. |
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fuuma_monou
Posts: 1848 Location: Quezon City, Philippines |
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The Walt Disney Company says hi. |
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