just a constant reminder that violating copyright law is literally doing thought crimes like you cant own thoughts mfer what you talking about
thought crime is cool and good do thought crime erryday
Tabletop, DnD, board games, and minecraft. Also Animal Crossing.
Rules
just a constant reminder that violating copyright law is literally doing thought crimes like you cant own thoughts mfer what you talking about
thought crime is cool and good do thought crime erryday
Read a little bit about this on the wiki page. It really sounds like some guy/company just lied to a regulatory body and then that org sent DMCA's out ~for~ them. And of course that agency was in the UK.
Just another reason the only response to a DMCA claim should be to do a
and send them a poop from a butt joke as a response. (Yes I am mature and normal.
)
Read a little bit about this on the wiki page. It really sounds like some guy/company just lied to a regulatory body and then that org sent DMCA's out ~for~ them.
So, that's just the thing—to a layperson, it seemed like they were registered with an actual regulatory body, but they were emphatically not. There are two parts to this: INTEROCO and Ukie. Here are the core bits of info:
Graceware's main support for their takedown notices has been a series of registrations filed by Brandon White through INTEROCO "Copyright Office" in 2021. These "registrations" claim ownership for a variety of aspects of Cookie's Bustle, including the source code, game concept, and character designs.
[...]
But here's the thing: These are not real copyright registrations, and INTEROCO is not a government agency.
INTEROCO is a private company in Germany that bills itself as a "full-automated electronic depository." It is effectively a digital version of mailing yourself a letter to get it date-stamped by the Post Office, a comparison that INTEROCO explicitly makes on their About Us page.
In theory, authors and creators could use INTEROCO to prove that they published a work on a specific date. However, it would be absurd to claim that depositing a copy of a work that's already been published means that you own the rights to it. It would be like mailing yourself a cartridge of Super Mario Bros., then claiming the postmarked envelope is proof you control the copyright to Super Mario Bros. A deposit on INTEROCO for a previously copyrighted work—such as the ones made by Brandon White—is effectively meaningless.
Graceware's takedown notices are filed on their behalf by Ukie, the Association for UK Interactive Entertainment. Ukie is the United Kingdom's largest video game trade organization, representing and providing professional services for over 2000 member companies. One of those services, according to Ukie, is free takedown requests for infringing use of copyrighted materials. Graceware is a member of Ukie and appears to use that service.
[...]
As official as it sounds to have a major trade organization sending takedowns for Graceware, the barrier to joining Ukie and using their legal services is shockingly low. Membership in Ukie costs less than £1000 per year for small companies. So if you have £60 a month, it looks like you can get the UK's largest gaming trade organization to send free takedown notices on your behalf.
[...]
Web Capio offers "real-time" IP protection services as a frontline defense against piracy and data leaks. By "real-time," what they mean is that they scrape the web for potentially infringing content and, according to their marketing materials, send out "automated takedown notices."
Notably, they have bragged that compared to other takedown services, they do not require the majority of their takedowns to be verified by a human.
In other words, Web Capio uses bots to send bulk takedown requests to websites, seemingly without confirming whether they are valid or appropriate. This would explain the large number of spurious takedowns related to Cookie's Bustle that have been reported.
The TL;DR is that the purported "copyright registrations" are no such thing, and the UK trade organization they are a member of (which clearly didn't do its due diligence to ensure they actually held the rights they claimed) is happy to blast out completely automated takedowns for anyone who pays £630+VAT per year to be a member (they suspended takedowns for this individual/company after being contacted by the VGHF and presumably not getting a satisfactory response from the troll).
I didn't get into the US trademarks here, but basically, they made provisionary applications for lapsed trademarks, but even if those trademarks are ever granted (which they have not been), it would have no bearing on matters of copyright.
Jeez, I know I'm preaching to the choir, but god damn copyright law is a bunch of bs. Like just in terms of understanding and tricks and "oops someone messed up because of X".
This looks interesting, is it a japanese Broken Sword/Monkey Island style game?
Yup, from what I can tell! Haven't played it myself yet, though.
Gonna have to put it on my todo list then I really like weird point and click adventure games.
I've always meant to try this, it's got english subs now right?
edit: indeed it does https://cookies-bustle.net/
AS FOR DREAMS