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Everything posted by Vegan Meat
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Why it's not okay to upload someone else's mods
Vegan Meat replied to Xuul's topic in General Kotor/TSL Modding
I think it was easy to understand. -
Why it's not okay to upload someone else's mods
Vegan Meat replied to Xuul's topic in General Kotor/TSL Modding
To save time and for clarity, I am opposed to any notion of copyright or intellectual property in any medium. In the same way as an artist, legally? No. You are all working within a medium created and owned by various game companies, with an ambiguously written EULA. -
Why it's not okay to upload someone else's mods
Vegan Meat replied to Xuul's topic in General Kotor/TSL Modding
Because public modding is freely distributed among fans of a certain game. I'll also point out that modders don't "own" content the way artists do. Additionally, I have no problems with Hassat Hunter's objections to RCM being posted to the Steam site if the service is dysfunctional and/or corrupts the quality of the installation. However, that that Darth Vader mod (to pick one) still resides only in the corner of some inbred lucasforum thread simply because no one can reach the original author (or whatever the case is) is bureaucratic dysfunction. -
Why it's not okay to upload someone else's mods
Vegan Meat replied to Xuul's topic in General Kotor/TSL Modding
It should be viewed as acceptable to upload anyone's mods in their original state to any site, particularly if the original hosting has died. 1. Publicly releasing files (and for free) means the author intends them to be used. 2. Nobody (unless engaged in untoward behavior) directly receives compensation for their files. At best, one can receive ad- or other revenue from the hosting website (I expect some people here receive this). I expect this is the best argument one could make in opposition; however, this perhaps treads the edge of legality if one were to closely examine the TSL's EULA [particularly points 6 and 10] (we and Lucasarts all know TSLRCM is what built this website), and more importantly, contradicts the notion that mods are made by fans for enjoyment. If one desired $, that modder should find a career in the game industry. 3. If nobody receives compensation for publicly released files, then what modders are concerned with here is something else. There are some characters, unfortunately present within a segment of the population which I'll cheerfully term "nerds", who utilize their positions among certain small communities to inflate their egos. By appointing themselves the sole holder of what other humans seek, people who are generally unimportant in their everyday lives can achieve some measure of superiority through artificially restricting the supply of a sought-after commodity. Now, some people might declare that is the prerogative of the modder to do, since he is the one who created the file. However, I (and others) think that freely distributing publicly created files is the essence of modding as a community, and therefore should be engaged in even over the objections of some capitalistic, corporate-minded people, whether external to the community or inside of it.