(2014-09-20, 19:59)natethomas Wrote: (2014-09-20, 16:57)FailBoatSailsOn Wrote: According to US copyright law, ROMs are completely illegal because they're for "archival purposes" only. The second you start playing them (even if you back them up yourself), they stop being archives and are actively used copies - or so quite a few lawyers have explained.
To my knowledge no case law supports this theory, and it shouldn't, as backed up ROMs fall into the same category as ripped music from CDs. In both cases, you are simply format shifting media without breaking DRM. If format shifting were illegal, Apple would have had its doors busted down by the cops a decade ago for iTunes.
edit: I'd be curious to hear which "lawyers" you've been talking to.
The RIAA wanted to make format shifting illegal and would've been successful in doing so if MP3 players and such weren't already popular. The Apple argument would be invalid either way considering Apple has deep pockets and would purchase the rights for their software to do so in order to push Apple software and hardware.
Saying that there's no case doesn't make it irrelevant. We all know how effortlessly rom warehouses are found on the net with no one, not even Nintendo, bothering to shut them down. However, if these companies didn't care about consumer backlash and went on a witch hunt, they'd be in the legal right.
Regardless, you're failing to acknowledge virtually every aspect of the DMCA (Digital Millenium Copyright Act) which states that circumventing copy protection measures makes even archival copies unlawful. That said, in the US, you can't legally rip ANY commercial DVD because they're all copy-protected - see MPAA vs RealNetworks and RealNetworks vs. DVD Copy Control Association. The rulings on these take me back to this point because it goes back to ROMs and how almost every cartridge and game disc had copy protection in place, including the BIOS of the systems being emulated by the emulators themselves, and the second that protection is circumvented, the copy is rendered unlawful - voiding both the Fair Use and Archival exemption clauses.
Furthermore, there's the EULA in even the oldest game manuals that state the games may not be copied under ANY circumstance, even archival, which overrides any and all exemptions.
EDIT: Last but not least,
https://ap.nintendo.com/faq/#circumvention
Q: Are infringing devices such as game copiers for Nintendo Handheld systems or mod chips for Nintendo Wii console illegal in the U.S.?
A: Yes. Game copiers that are used to copy video game software without authorization onto any type of memory device or the hard drive of a personal computer are illegal. They enable the user to make, play and distribute illegal copies of video game software, which violates Nintendo's copyrights and trademarks. Mod chips are also designed to circumvent the copy-protection security system and deem the detection process inoperable, enabling the console to play pirated or illegal copies of Nintendo games downloaded from the Internet. Based upon the functions of these devices, they are illegal.
As for the lawyers, virtually every legal advice page / tech blog / tech magazine article regarding emulation is uniform on this with the lawyers they interviewed.