• Schmeckinger@lemmy.world
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    13 hours ago

    I mean that really depends on the country, but I was talking how that usually is in my experience. In Germany you have to own the original medium of a backup and according to a quick google search same for the US.

    • atrielienz@lemmy.world
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      4 hours ago

      I already covered the fact that it depends on the country in my first comment.

      I’m arguing that the person who bought the used game has no control whatsoever over the fact that a backup copy of that game cartridge had been created.

      If you so much as lend out your copy of a game they can brick the system that the copy was leant to? That’s what you’re arguing here. Because that’s the conclusion of “you have to retain ownership”. The conclusion is that that somehow makes it okay to harm a third party you can’t even prove did anything wrong.

      Say I lend my copy of a game to my kid? I’m still the owner. I still have the cartridge. This is what I’m talking about. Nintendo doesn’t know that the law was broken just because you inserted a mig cartridge into your console. They don’t know that the law was broken when the game cartridge is inserted into another switch.

      But they are acting as if they do know and are actively detrimentally affecting their customers as a result and they don’t care. That’s not okay.

      • Schmeckinger@lemmy.world
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        2 hours ago

        If you give away the card to your kid just leave your switch in airplane mode and you won’t have a problem. But even so it’s not allowed to do that. Btw you can also do that with a digital copy to lend it to another switch while in airplane mode.