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I ran the majority of those games through Abandonia's oldwarez list (http://www.abandonia.com/en/oldwarez/), which determines whether the games are more or less legal to distribute because of the expired copyright. All the ones that returned came back as Abandonware. So yeah, you're totally fine. It's extremely rare to see a game's copyright last more than 15 years, and these games are, at latest, mid-80's.
Yeah, Atari no longer exists, so they won't really care.Also the Atari company in France is a different company who bought the rights to call themselves Atari. Dunno if they also bought all the stuff from the former Atari too.
Quote from: Twerty on June 18, 2011, 04:08:30 pmI ran the majority of those games through Abandonia's oldwarez list (http://www.abandonia.com/en/oldwarez/), which determines whether the games are more or less legal to distribute because of the expired copyright. All the ones that returned came back as Abandonware. So yeah, you're totally fine. It's extremely rare to see a game's copyright last more than 15 years, and these games are, at latest, mid-80's.From Wikipedia:"In most cases, software classed as abandonware is not in the public domain, as it has never had its original copyright revoked and some company or individual still owns exclusive rights. Therefore, sharing of such software is usually considered copyright infringement, though in practice copyright holders rarely enforce their abandonware copyrights."I should probably mention, by the way, I'm thinking about the source code for the Atari 7800 game Commando
In most cases, though, I prefer that game ports or clones are made by people like you Hot_Dog...