• First Majestic Comet
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    6711 months ago

    There are no words to describe what a shitty person this is. I bet he’s also a scab in the current Reddit protests trying to kiss up to spez for some crappy Reddit merch.

  • Grammaton Cleric
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    5911 months ago

    I love how even though it’s not for sale, they just had to put the Blizz logo on it

    • FiveMacs
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      811 months ago

      Pretty sure it has to be there and/or it’s generic template.

  • QueueM
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    2911 months ago

    Wow, what a bootlicker. Incredible.

  • @Dasnap@lemmy.world
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    11 months ago

    TBH I’d get scared shitless of a lawyer turning up at my door. Maybe I’d ‘give away a couple of random old CDs I had lying around’ to an archivist.

    • @masterspace@lemmy.ca
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      2611 months ago

      Go on Kijiji, buy a shit laptop, do a fresh Linux install, go sit outside a McDonald’s or somewhere with fewer cameras, get on free WiFi, rip it and upload it, and toss the laptop.

  • @MIDItheKID@lemmy.world
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    11 months ago

    Edit: I deleted everything I said because I misread “source code” as “sound track”… Nevermind me go on with your day.

    • @rockSlayer@lemmy.world
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      3911 months ago

      I work in the games industry, and have extensive knowledge of NDAs that may or may not be attributed to unionization efforts. If you find a random disk somewhere and the contents are confidential, you are not subject to the NDA. They can ask, and even sue, for the property back but it’s not a guarantee that they’ll win. There are cases like this that have gone both ways.

      The owner of the disk could have anonymously leaked the contents, sold the disk, or anything they wanted with it. It doesn’t matter because in general, if the disk was legally acquired then it’s their property to do with as they please. Leaking the contents is the only legally questionable thing that the owner could have done with the code.

      • Walt J. Rimmer
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        3511 months ago

        They can ask, and even sue, for the property back but it’s not a guarantee that they’ll win.

        They’re guaranteed to win if the person they’re suing can’t afford to live for years embroiled in litigation.

        • @rockSlayer@lemmy.world
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          1511 months ago

          Unfortunately yea, our legal system basically exists for the wealthy to exert control over the rest of the country. Not much can be done in that situation

        • TheSaneWriter
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          611 months ago

          Sometimes yes, sometimes no. Often companies will pretend they can drag out a case for years when they can’t, and simply hope no one calls their bluff.

  • NormalC
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    1511 months ago

    Don’t even think of mentioning making games libre software or you’ll get attacked for endangering people’s livelihoods for “selfish fanatical ends” and forcing game devs into “a vow of poverty and piracy.” It’s not worth it to these people.

    • @SSUPII@sopuli.xyz
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      3411 months ago

      Archival, making mods, making custom modern builds of the game for new hardware, improving the game…

      So much potential to keep a game alive instead of locking it on some arcaic hardware nobody has spare parts for.

    • TragicNotCute
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      3111 months ago

      It would let you recreate or change any aspect of the game you wanted. Much more control than mods would generally allow for.

    • wander1236
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      11 months ago

      If the game is something people really want to play, having the source code makes it a lot easier for someone to make the game work on modern operating systems, and possible to port it to ones it didn’t originally support.

    • @deadcade@lemmy.deadca.de
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      211 months ago

      The source code of a program is like a recipe and list of ingredients. If you buy a coffee from Starbucks, you get a coffee from Starbucks. You can’t easily change the beans used, the brew temperature, etc. With the recipe, you could brew your own with slight differences, or make coffee from scratch knowing everything that’s in Starbucks coffee. With the source code for a game, you could change/mod anything. FPS unlock mods, ports to other platforms, and much more. You could make your own game, and make it better knowing how some systems work in another game.

      Some games have their source code leaked, in which case it is illegal to own, redistribute, or learn from the code. Although it’ll usually still happen, it’s much more “underground” than games where the source code was reverse engineered. Reverse engineering is like buying a coffee, tasting it, then coming up with your own recipe. Having your own recipe almost exactly identical to the original still allows you to make changes easily, but it’s not illegal, as you wrote it, and are allowed to share your own recipe. Some older titles like Super Mario 64 have been fully reverse engineered, and ported to every possible platform, with multiplayer mods, FPS unlock mods, etc.

      • @OmegaMouse@feddit.uk
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        211 months ago

        So the source code gets turned into a .exe (or equivalent) when it gets compiled right? What stops it from being decompiled? Do the developers add in some kind of cipher? Or is it just that working out what the low level code does in the exe is very difficult?

        • ShittyKopper [they/them]
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          11 months ago

          in most cases you lose a lot of the information in the source code during the compilation process, making decompilation significantly more difficult.

          there are cases, particularly with newer games that are less “close to the metal”, where decompilation works really well (hell, it’s the reason why minecraft modding is as it is), but for older or more demanding games those kinds of abstractions would often result in less performance, meaning the devs would spend more effort squeezing as much performance out as possible, which was often done by programming in a lower level than games of today

          • Azzy
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            111 months ago

            An interesting note on Minecraft specifically, because it runs on Java which is half-compiled and half-interpreted (I guess??), there’s usually much more information within Java applications than those written in C or C++.

    • Kit Sorens
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      11 months ago

      So, especially with PC games, software is compiled using an IDE/language and runtime environments. That last part is why games stop running on newer versions of windows, and it’s especially why older games can’t just “be ported” to consoles, mac, etc. Once you compile a program, it’s like etching that program into a stone called an executable/extension(DLL). If you want your program to run on anything other than the old compatible hardware using their runtime libraries, you gotta have the OG source code in order to recompile. Blizard North had a liquidation sale way back and the source codes to their projects was in it. They’ve been scrambling to get it all back to make remakes/remasters.

  • @NoStressyJessie@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    711 months ago

    I recently found a fan recreation of a RTS game from around this time called Lego: Rock Raiders (The remake is called Manic Miners if anyone is interested). Would’ve been really cool to have similar fan remakes for StarCraft and Warcraft but with some of the actual code to port the engine up like GZDoom.

  • Soulfire
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    111 months ago

    I’m actually really curious if they could have possibly gotten away with selling the source code back to Blizzard. Because for a disc containing the entirety of the source code for starcraft, they sure didn’t do a good job labeling it as confidential or as being their property. And certainly they weren’t selling the source code.

    • Soulfire
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      111 months ago

      Meh, I’m pretty sure blizzard would have just done what Wizards of the Coast did and hire pinkertons to claw it back.