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    Is it Legal to use an arcade machine running retropie, put it in a public place and charge quarters to use it?

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved General Discussion and Gaming
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    • T
      Themicster
      last edited by

      After a lot of searching on the interwebs and reading mixed answers I figured I'd just ask on here.
      I know the owner of a shop that will let me put an arcade machine in their building. If I custom build an arcade cabinet and run Retropie on it and find non-copyrighted games to play on it, can I put it in a public place and charge quarters to use?

      Thanks for the info!

      mediamogulM Drakaen391D 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • cyperghostC
        cyperghost
        last edited by

        A puplic place like yaBe for example?

        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • jonnykeshJ
          jonnykesh
          last edited by

          Why is peoples' first thought always "How can I make money out of this thing that people make for free?"
          Who is going to want to pay to play a load of freeware / homebrew / shovelware games? People will be attracted to an arcade machine and expect to see the classics on there. You won't have any (legally) because those games are copyrighted.
          Also a lot of emulators shipped and run under RetroPie have non-commercial licenses, so using them to make money is strictly forbidden.
          This question gets asked on this forum every few months and the answer is always NO.

          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 3
          • mediamogulM
            mediamogul Global Moderator @Themicster
            last edited by mediamogul

            @themicster

            I wouldn't bother if I were you. You'd have to go over the licenses for both the emulators, as well as the games, with a fine toothed comb. Some of the emulators have non-commercial licenses and some of the games would forbid public use. As far as using "non-copyrighted" games, you should be aware that any creative work made since 1978, including video games, automatically has a copyright if it was developed in the United States. Other countries have similar automatic protection that you'd need to be aware of. The number of games you could get away with using would be very limited.

            RetroPie v4.5 • RPi3 Model B • 5.1V 2.5A PSU • 16GB SanDisk microSD • 512GB External Drive

            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 5
            • Drakaen391D
              Drakaen391 @Themicster
              last edited by

              @themicster in the US, you wouldnt be able to....

              Mostly because of the non-commercial license on the retropie/retroarch/emulationstation software

              You could build it for people to enjoy for free, but the moment you start charging, it violates the License agreements.

              RPi B & RPi 3B OC (Now Raspberry pi 4b 8gb)
              Retropie (Latest Stable)
              PiBox with Wind Tunnel Cooling System

              jonnykeshJ T 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • jonnykeshJ
                jonnykesh @Drakaen391
                last edited by jonnykesh

                @drakaen391 said in Is it Legal to use an arcade machine running retropie, put it in a public place and charge quarters to use it?:

                in the US, you wouldnt be able to....

                Why specifically in the US?
                The same or similar rights which are extended to creators, licences and IP holders are held and enforced in most of the civilised world.

                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • T
                  Themicster @Drakaen391
                  last edited by

                  @drakaen391 said in Is it Legal to use an arcade machine running retropie, put it in a public place and charge quarters to use it?:

                  @themicster in the US, you wouldnt be able to....

                  You could build it for people to enjoy for free, but the moment you start charging, it violates the License agreements.

                  So I could possibly put it in the same place for free use?

                  jonnykeshJ 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • T
                    Themicster
                    last edited by

                    Also, thank you everyone for the info!

                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • jonnykeshJ
                      jonnykesh @Themicster
                      last edited by

                      @themicster No. Not in a commercial premises. If it is there as an attraction. Even if it is "Free Play" it is still being used in a commercial manner, contrary to the explicit licenses of the games, the emulators and various other bits of non-commercial software.
                      "Open Source" does not mean "ripe for commercial exploitation".

                      hooperreH 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • hooperreH
                        hooperre @jonnykesh
                        last edited by

                        @jonnykesh said in Is it Legal to use an arcade machine running retropie, put it in a public place and charge quarters to use it?:

                        @themicster No. Not in a commercial premises. If it is there as an attraction. Even if it is "Free Play" it is still being used in a commercial manner, contrary to the explicit licenses of the games, the emulators and various other bits of non-commercial software.
                        "Open Source" does not mean "ripe for commercial exploitation".

                        We've had this conversation on here a few times. I think this is more or less what everybody concluded.

                        So the dentist that has a SNES for his patient to play until he's ready is technically using it against IP/license agreements. It makes it confusing, however, how Blockbuster and other people got away with renting games. Or how something like console arcades are allowed to exist.

                        jonnykeshJ 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                        • jonnykeshJ
                          jonnykesh @hooperre
                          last edited by

                          @hooperre The Dentist was breaking the law. Simple as that.
                          Blockbuster had a licence from the publisher to rent the game to a member on a temporary basis. The same as they had a license to temporarily loan a movie to a member. Perhaps I missed something?

                          hooperreH mediamogulM HyruleslinkH 3 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                          • hooperreH
                            hooperre @jonnykesh
                            last edited by hooperre

                            @jonnykesh said in Is it Legal to use an arcade machine running retropie, put it in a public place and charge quarters to use it?:

                            @hooperre The Dentist was breaking the law. Simple as that.
                            Blockbuster had a licence from the publisher to rent the game to a member on a temporary basis. The same as they had a license to temporarily loan a movie to a member. Perhaps I missed something?

                            Just curious, would you find the dentist to be morally wrong?

                            Edit: Only reason I ask is because this seems a touch heavy-handed in the case of the dentist, for me personally.

                            "Open Source" does not mean "ripe for commercial exploitation".

                            jonnykeshJ 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                            • mediamogulM
                              mediamogul Global Moderator @jonnykesh
                              last edited by mediamogul

                              @jonnykesh said in Is it Legal to use an arcade machine running retropie, put it in a public place and charge quarters to use it?:

                              Blockbuster had a licence from the publisher to rent the game to a member on a temporary basis.

                              Actually, Blockbuster obtained almost all of their games through a retail company at a deep discount without ever dealing with licenses on most occasions. As a result, they found themselves in court quite a bit as I remember. However, I don't think any of the offenses were ever fully litigated.

                              RetroPie v4.5 • RPi3 Model B • 5.1V 2.5A PSU • 16GB SanDisk microSD • 512GB External Drive

                              jonnykeshJ 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                              • jonnykeshJ
                                jonnykesh @hooperre
                                last edited by

                                @hooperre Morals are irrelevant. If he was using the console as a part of his business without paying for a commercial license he was breaking the law. It really is that simple.

                                hooperreH 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                • hooperreH
                                  hooperre @jonnykesh
                                  last edited by

                                  This post is deleted!
                                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                  • jonnykeshJ
                                    jonnykesh @mediamogul
                                    last edited by

                                    @mediamogul This is a "technical" discussion at best.
                                    Morals are irrelevant. Are we not talking about the actual letter of the law?
                                    Similar situation today... Netflix decide to upload a Movie without express permission of the owners. Is that legal? I don't think that will fly.

                                    mediamogulM 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                    • mediamogulM
                                      mediamogul Global Moderator @jonnykesh
                                      last edited by

                                      @jonnykesh said in Is it Legal to use an arcade machine running retropie, put it in a public place and charge quarters to use it?:

                                      Are we not talking about the actual letter of the law?

                                      A: We Are Devo! ;)

                                      RetroPie v4.5 • RPi3 Model B • 5.1V 2.5A PSU • 16GB SanDisk microSD • 512GB External Drive

                                      jonnykeshJ 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                                      • jonnykeshJ
                                        jonnykesh @mediamogul
                                        last edited by

                                        @mediamogul 0_1524097221076_devo.jpg

                                        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                                        • HyruleslinkH
                                          Hyruleslink @jonnykesh
                                          last edited by

                                          @jonnykesh said:
                                          "Blockbuster had a licence from the publisher to rent the game to a member on a temporary basis."

                                          This is completely false and incorrect. There was no legislation or practice of requiring licences for videogame rentals. Nintendo fought Blockbuster tooth and nail to prevent game rentals and to protect their copyrights. Nintendo lost that war and the only battle they ultimately won over Blockbuster was the prevention of photocopying game manuals, because they were being unlawfully reproduced.

                                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                          • Raistlin84R
                                            Raistlin84
                                            last edited by

                                            In my country the emulation software is permitted only if it doesn't use code from the original software.
                                            So first point the emulator is ok, but you can't use bios from the orginal console! Owning the Bios is always forbidden, downloading it too.
                                            Downloading copyrighted software is always forbidden, so you can't download the rom. You can have a game rom if you own it and the user license doesn't forbid.
                                            After such things, you must read the License Agreement because in the 99,9999% you can't use store in plubic place, free of charge too.
                                            The denstist example with the snes is good, he can't do it. In many commercial licenses (maybe all) is reported "home use only". So it is really simple, you can do only breaking the law. I don't agree with actual laws, but we aren't talking about this.

                                            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
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