
Earlier this week we reported on a lawsuit filed in France by consumer advocacy group UFC-Que Choisir against Ubisoft for the way it sunsetted The Crew. As we noted then, the filing was fully supported by Ross Scott’s Stop Killing Games initative, and in his latest video he talks about the impact it could have on the games industry.
Scott goes through the UFC’s statement about the filing, noting a couple of times that the org is “swinging for the fences” in its arguments, even beyond what the initiative is technically asking for in some cases. He also points out that the suit hinges on existing French law, which he believes could set a major precedent for other European countries if it’s successful.
Another major announcement in the video is word that Scott himself will be speaking at EU parliament on Thursday, April 16th, when the citizens’ initiative petition that was highlighted by Stop Killing Games will be having its official hearing. Scott admits that he never saw this as a possibility, and even jokes about how out of place he’ll be, but reasons that the initiative chose him to speak since he’s been taking on arguments against game shutdown for a while. He also says that there will be another press conference later that same day.
• MMO Business Roundup: Nintendo’s US patent, The Crew lawsuit, Epic helps a terminally ill former dev
• Stop Killing Games organizers say EU commission meeting ‘went fine’ but admit to uphill battles
• ‘I think we’re gonna win this’: Stop Killing Games on game preservation in the US and EU
• Stop Killing Games heads before the EU commission February 23 with organizer Ross Scott in tow
• Stop Killing Games is all but assured of a hearing in the EU for its petition
• Some clown tried to attack Stop Killing Games with a bogus claim arguing time is money
• Kickstarted MMORPG Dual Universe is sunsetting, but it’ll live on through player-hosted servers
• MMORPG Loftia hasn’t even launched and its devs already have a theoretical end-of-life preservation plan
• MMO Business Roundup: Stop Killing Games, SAG-AFTRA ratifies contract, and Hytale chatter
• MMO Business Roundup: Ubisoft execs sentenced, Stop Killing Games, and AAA game dev worries
• Stop Killing Games approaches its final deadline as its founder reflects on a year of efforts
• Sandbox MMORPG BitCraft hopes to ‘democratize MMO development’ by going open-source
• UK rebuffs game preservationists’ petition to make retroactively breaking old games unlawful
• MMO Business Roundup: Embracer Q2 2024, Steam toxicity, and GOG’s game preservation program
• Stop Killing Games Initiative stumps for signatures to pressure EU governments
• Stop Killing Games opens worldwide petitions and shares a UK government response in update video
• It’s 2024 and the ESA is still fighting game preservation, forecasting a depraved ‘online arcade’
• ‘If buying isn’t owning, piracy isn’t stealing,’ say gamers reviewbombing the remaining The Crew games
• Ubisoft pulls The Crew 1 from player libraries, encourages them to ‘check the store to pursue your adventures’
• Vague Patch Notes: Game preservation is way more complicated than it seems
• Stop Killing Games is a modern games preservation initiative prompted by The Crew’s cynical sunset
• The Soapbox: The day my son lost his first online video game to a sunset
• Choose My Adventure: What Final Fantasy XI taught me about games preservation and the ‘good old days’
• The Soapbox: Are modern games more disposable than ever?
• Microsoft’s Phil Spencer advocates for game preservation through emulators
• Game preservation champion The Museum of Art and Digital Entertainment has closed its doors
• Lawful Neutral: What DMCA exemption victories really mean for MMO preservation
• Vague Patch Notes: The complexity of classic preservation for MMOs
• The Video Game Museum offers a home to Star Wars Galaxies, City of Heroes, and WildStar
• US Library of Congress grants DMCA exception for preserving online games
• Raph Koster on the ESA’s DMCA battle: ‘Preservation matters’
• The ESA is fighting proposed DMCA exemptions that would preserve sunsetted MMORPGs because of course it is
• The US government is considering DMCA exceptions for archived online games after all
Source link
#Stop #Killing #Games #praises #French #lawsuit #Ubisoft #preps #speak #parliament #April

