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The newest exhibition at Boston’s Museum of Fine Arts invites visitors to contemplate mortality through the eyes of young curators.
Recently, a legal showdown rocked the gaming world: Sony took British company Datel to court, accusing them of copyright infringement. Datel had developed a device that not only enhanced the ...
It's a victory for Datel, but it may not open the floodgates for more cheating software. "No doubt developers and publishers of cheat software will rejoice.
Third-party PlayStation cheats and add-ons don’t necessarily break EU law The lawsuit stemmed from Datel selling cheats for 2009’s PSP game MotorStorm Arctic Edge (also released on the PS2).
PlayStation asserted that as Datel's boosts use its source code, the company was infringing its copyright under EU law. The case was first taken to court back in 2012.
Sony has suffered legal blow this week after losing its battle to prevent third-party add-ons being sold for PlayStation games. The format holder’s case was against the UK-based software company ...
Software sold by UK company Datel that allowed infinite boosts on a racing game doesn’t infringe EU copyright law, judges in Luxembourg said, in a ruling that some say could prove crucial to the ...
By Ted Fu In a lawsuit filed by Sony against Datel, a British game modification tool manufacturer known for Pro Action Replay, the European Court of Justice ruled on October 17, 2024 that ...
This article is featured in the 2023 Commencement & Reunions special issue. Over the past three years, Dartmouth students and faculty members have made large strides in labor organizing through three ...
On April 18, the New Hampshire State House Education Committee held a public hearing over Senate Bill 272, known as the “parental bill of rights.” According to House representative Loren Selig, ...
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