Connect with us

Hi, what are you looking for?

Webinar News NetworkWebinar News Network

Tech News

Video game preservationists have lost a legal fight to study games remotely

Photo collage showing old video games floating out of a vault door.
Collage by Cath Virginia / The Verge | Photos from Getty Images

When video game scholars want to study games that are no longer on sale, they sometimes have to drive many hours to do it legally — and that won’t be changing anytime soon. The US Copyright Office has just denied a request from video game preservationists to let libraries, archives and museums temporarily lend individuals some virtual, remotely accessible copies of those works.

Kendra Albert, who made the argument on behalf of the Software Preservation Network and the Library Copyright Alliance, says preservationists weren’t asking for a lot: “It was the thing that basically exists for all kinds of special collections in libraries: the library reviews the request, makes sure it’s not harmful, and allows access to the work.”

While the…

Continue reading…

You May Also Like

Editor's Pick

Jennifer J. Schulp and Jack Solowey What do Yankees tickets and Pokémon cards have in common? If you guessed wish list items for elementary...

Editor's Pick

James A. Dorn In her recent article in Business Insider, Linette Lopez, a graduate of the School of Journalism at Columbia University, argues that China’s...

Editor's Pick

Colleen Hroncich Nicholas Ellis wants to tell a different story about what it means to flourish. “What does it mean to win at life...

Editor's Pick

S&P 500 earnings are in for 2024 Q2, and here is our valuation analysis. The following chart shows the normal value range of the...