
Originally posted by Ghost
:~(
So you deleted you Teen Pr0n, warez games, DVDRips and music downloaded form the interweb?
Originally posted by TC
A specific set of instructions can be protected under copyright. You can't copy what they say, but that can't stop you from independantly writing your own set of instructions to run the product.
Also, there's nothing in fair use that would allow you to copy manuals, as far as I know. That would be a very stupid clause.
Any copied text that isn't a part of a review, critisism, or similar study of the text would be, technically, counter to copyright, AFAIK. Things like screenshots, excerpts and the like are granted by the game companies because it would be stupid to go and piss off all their customers and it's good advertising.
Game manuals have nothing to do with the DMCA in the US... it's just plain old copyright law, which is more than capable of making it illegal. However, the people at EA and Origin don't appear to care, so I wouldn't worry.
Originally posted by TCSTigersClaw
But the online End Run is illigal........?Its still online with no problems and its hosted by Blacklance
Originally posted by Delance
The ideas on the set of instructions cannot be copyrighted. Sometimes, that is the set of instructions, like a reference card or command list.
You can copy text for a variety of reasons other then review or similar study... Fair use is very open in nature. Private copies are also still protected, even under the DMCA, to some degree.
As for the manuals... Truth is that they are protected, and scanning them and making them available for download could, in theory, be considered illegal. But there are solid arguments on both sides. Copyright laws are not clear on this matter.
One could argue that manuals could only be used with the games that should have them anyway. So if you get a game w/o a manual, then it's OK for you to download it. That, in fact, game companies more often then not don't offer such services at all. If you own a game and the game company don’t give you any access to the manual, then what is to be expected of you? I think it’s only reasonable that you get yourself a copy. And if you have a pirate game, the copy of the manual is the least of your problems.
You are right wen you say that Game manuals on paper are not covered by the DMCA. But if they are on a medium like PDF, they might be. However, you must consider another possibility: if the game has a copy-protection that requires reading the manual to access, and you copy a manual to this end, the copy of the manual can be punished under the DMCA, in theory. This happens because it would be an action that allows you to circumvent a copy-protection.
Originally posted by ChrisReid
I would place them in the same category as the screenshots and all that sort of thing.
Originally posted by steampunk
That doen't sound right. I blieve you have to wait like 50 years after the death of an author for the copyright to run out. Something like that. I'm sure someone else will know better.
Originally posted by Aries
i think that it's not illegal cause it's not in print anymore, so they ain't gonna get anymore money from it.
Originally posted by Ghost
So you deleted you Teen Pr0n, warez games, DVDRips and music downloaded form the interweb?
Originally posted by Delance
On the specific case of WC manuals, I don’t think there should be any problem. It’s more instruction and only small bits of fiction and graphics here and there.
Originally posted by Delance
Fair use is very open in nature. Private copies are also still protected, even under the DMCA, to some degree.

Originally posted by Delance
You are right wen you say that Game manuals on paper are not covered by the DMCA. But if they are on a medium like PDF, they might be.
Originally posted by TC
Companies aren't required to distribute manuals with their products, though. Purchasing an instance of something doesn't automatically entitle you to a manual, if it did there'd be no market for playguides.
Hmm. Actually... I was looking at the Baen website just now. It seems they have this thing called, appropriately enough, the free library. Basically, any Baen author can put up a book of his there, and anybody can download the book for free. Needless to say, nobody puts up all their work - the idea is generally to put up the first book of a series, and hope that the few lost sales for the first book will be counterbalanced by more people buying the rest of the series in general.Originally posted by cff
I think it is 70 years now. But of course if Baen did allow the PDFification (which I doubt they did) then they gave up their right. Something every copytight holder can do at any time.
Originally posted by cff
Aeh - no. A manual and a playguide are two very different things.
Originally posted by Quarto
Hmm. Actually... I was looking at the Baen website just now. It seems they have this thing called, appropriately enough, the free library.
Originally posted by Quarto
On an amusing sidenote, last year in Poland I came across a Polish edition of one of them Honor Harrington books. Nothing unusual about that, right? Well, this one used End Run's cover art.

Originally posted by Delance
I always thought some of that cover arts were more generic sci-fi than WC specifically...![]()
OK, I'm confused: Who is this Honor Harrington person, and what (if any) connection to WC do they have? (or are they just tied in to Baen, since I have most of the WC novels, and have never heard this person's name?...) Anyone?...Originally posted by TC
Not End Run, though... and the ships really don't look anything like those described in the Honor Harrington books.