Atari's legal threats prompt Apple to pull some games from iOS App Store
Game maker Atari has reportedly set its sights on applications in Apple's iOS App Store that it believes are illegal knock-offs of its own classic titles.
Legal pressure from Atari has caused some titles to be removed by Apple from the App Store, including "Vector Tanks" by Black Powder Media, gamesindustry.biz reported on Tuesday (via The Loop). The developer issued a statement saying that anything with a "passing resemblance to an Atari classic has been issued a copyright infringement claim."
The developer asserts that Atari has a "special relationship" with Apple, which has led to applications being pulled without a chance for rebuttal or further evaluation. Black Power Media's "Vector Tanks" is a wireframe 3D game that resembles Atari's "Battlezone."
The developer even claims they previously attempted to contact Atari to license their intellectual property for "Vector Tanks," but they could not be reached. He said the company seems "to have fallen off the planet."
An official Kickstarter page that was originally seeking funding to create a "Vector Tanks 3" states that Atari's legal pressure has affected "hundreds of apps" available for the iPhone and iPad. However, there's no indication how many other applications have been affected or pulled from the App Store because of Atari's approach.
The third installment of the tank game will now be redesigned with faster vehicles and air-based attackers to avoid Atari's claims of intellectual property infringement, and will have the name "The Visceral Adventures of Vic Vector."
"Spurred by the competition and their heavy tactics, we're making our game that much better, and Vic Vector's universe that much sleeker and cooler," the developer said.
Legal pressure from Atari has caused some titles to be removed by Apple from the App Store, including "Vector Tanks" by Black Powder Media, gamesindustry.biz reported on Tuesday (via The Loop). The developer issued a statement saying that anything with a "passing resemblance to an Atari classic has been issued a copyright infringement claim."
The developer asserts that Atari has a "special relationship" with Apple, which has led to applications being pulled without a chance for rebuttal or further evaluation. Black Power Media's "Vector Tanks" is a wireframe 3D game that resembles Atari's "Battlezone."
The developer even claims they previously attempted to contact Atari to license their intellectual property for "Vector Tanks," but they could not be reached. He said the company seems "to have fallen off the planet."
An official Kickstarter page that was originally seeking funding to create a "Vector Tanks 3" states that Atari's legal pressure has affected "hundreds of apps" available for the iPhone and iPad. However, there's no indication how many other applications have been affected or pulled from the App Store because of Atari's approach.
The third installment of the tank game will now be redesigned with faster vehicles and air-based attackers to avoid Atari's claims of intellectual property infringement, and will have the name "The Visceral Adventures of Vic Vector."
"Spurred by the competition and their heavy tactics, we're making our game that much better, and Vic Vector's universe that much sleeker and cooler," the developer said.
Comments
Tom
2. This developer says they tried to contact Atari essentially admitting that they knew they were dealing with someone else's IP. Atari refused to play because they didn't want to which doesn't negate their ownership and give someone else a blanket permission to infringe.
Summary, these guys have no room to say squat. They played with fire and they were burned. Time to actually create something and leave Atari's IP for them to port or not as they wish.
nice to see Atari still loves to sue everyone and everything they can.
Shame Atari just doesn't get all those games ported and bank a few more $$$ as the income stream obviously dried many years ago for these. There is great interest in retro gaming so why not cash in...
Tom
Atari offers "Greatest Hits" for the iPad which has a number of their 2600 console games. No Space Invaders though as Atari only licensed the game.
I wonder if Atari still hire hippies who smell bad and make them work the night shift?
I like that!
Figures. It was a lawsuit by the original Atari company that created the legal precedent for copyright's applicability to the look and feel of a video game, back when video games were just starting to have graphics detailed enough to represent anything distinctive. The Pac-Man clone they sued off the market was really vastly superior to the officially licensed Pac-Man for Atari 2600. http://itlaw.wikia.com/wiki/Atari_v....erican_Philips
It's about like if nobody else could make a song with drums / guitars / singing because one band did it first. You know, it substantially captures the feel of rock 'n' roll.
Figures. It was a lawsuit by the original Atari company that created the legal precedent for copyright's applicability to the look and feel of a video game, back when video games were just starting to have graphics detailed enough to represent anything distinctive. The Pac-Man clone they sued off the market was really vastly superior to the officially licensed Pac-Man for Atari 2600. http://itlaw.wikia.com/wiki/Atari_v....erican_Philips
Unlike the mess we have with IP and Patents, I personally do not have much of an issue with look and feel copyrights. It no different than someone creating art or a book only to have someone else coping it almost exactly and selling your work for their profits. Copyrights are pretty straight forward and Atari was not the first to do this. Other companies began to do similar things prior to Atari, they were probably the first one to actually suite someone for coping the look of their product. I work at a company who use to copyright the artwork for their silicon chip designs. It was a very easy and quick way to show if some copied the chip design it the lithography are work of chip match very closely to their then you must have copied the design, especially if it did the same function, no need to say they use your IP, play no time limit on copyrights.
I wonder if Atari still hire hippies who smell bad and make them work the night shift?
I always wonder about these "Hippies smell bad" comments when they come up. Most hippies I ever met smell fine but most businessmen I have met smell like sweat and have coffee, cigarettes, or scotch on their breath (or all of the above mixed together).
I think this is another one of those popular misconceptions along the lines of "women are bad drivers" (in fact they are better drivers on average than men are). It makes one wonder what the cultural necessity is at the root of the misconception.
The benefit of the wide-spread illusion that women are bad drivers in a male dominated society is rather obvious, but why do we need to believe that hippies "smell bad?"
Unlike the mess we have with IP and Patents, I personally do not have much of an issue with look and feel copyrights. It no different than someone creating art or a book only to have someone else coping it almost exactly and selling your work for their profits.
A little anecdote: Rickenbacker is a guitar manufacturer that was quite prominent with the British invasion of the 1960s. While Fender and Gibson failed to defend the designs of their iconic guitars, Rickenbacker aggressively defended their 'look and feel' copyrights over the last 40 years. They have been going after knock-off companies with every legal recourse they had to stop anyone from copying their instruments.
The result- Fender and Gibson have in the last few years spent untold millions trying to retroactively regain control of their designs which have been copied again and again and again, while Rickenbacker has a hard time filling their orders to a tune of a 12-24 month waiting list to purchase a new guitar. Their protective nature prevented the market from being flooded with copies that would have lowered the draw of the 'real' instruments.
Protecting one's ideas is just as valuable as coming up with the ideas in the first place.
It's about like if nobody else could make a song with drums / guitars / singing because one band did it first. You know, it substantially captures the feel of rock 'n' roll.
Your example is ridiculously over the top, but even if it wasn't, a part of the answer lies in the fact that there are different standards for different arts or medias.
For instance it's not widely known, but there is no copyright on fashion design at all. You can go to a designer show, take pictures, go straight home and copy everything stitch for stick and sell it as your own. As long as you don't represent it as being from the original designer, you are 100% legal and safe. It's only copying the logo/branded merchandise and maintaining it's the original that will get you in trouble which is why "brands" exist in the first place.
Perhaps rock music is like fashion in that it's not really that original. It is all based on the same three chords played on the same three instruments after all.
Most hippies I ever met smell fine but most businessmen I have met smell like sweat and have coffee, cigarettes, or scotch on their breath (or all of the above mixed together). ...
... but why do we need to believe that hippies "smell bad?"
I dunno ... why do you believe most businessmen smell bad?
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I always wonder about these "Hippies smell bad" comments when they come up. Most hippies I ever met smell fine but most businessmen I have met smell like sweat and have coffee, cigarettes, or scotch on their breath (or all of the above mixed together).
I think this is another one of those popular misconceptions along the lines of "women are bad drivers" (in fact they are better drivers on average than men are). It makes one wonder what the cultural necessity is at the root of the misconception.
The benefit of the wide-spread illusion that women are bad drivers in a male dominated society is rather obvious, but why do we need to believe that hippies "smell bad?"
Talks about heritage of ideas and borrowing and plagiarism.
interesting point of view is expressed in the article. might be of interest to this conversation.
The ecstasy of influence: A plagiarism
By Jonathan Lethem
full text here-> http://harpers.org/archive/2007/02/0081387