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Legal Status of Emulation

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'''This page will try and document some notable incidents regarding the legal status of emulation. Nothing in this page should be considered legal advice.'''
 
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The legality of using encryption keys for emulators or accessing personal video collections is a debated topic. These keys, typically generated by random number algorithms, are not subject to copyright protection unlike creative content. In the realm of DVDs, Blu-rays, and HD DVDs, the question arises: should using open-source software to decode, watch, or back up your legally acquired video collection be restricted due to these non-copyrightable encryption keys? See [[#Not directly about emulation]] for the home media and home video realm.
 
There are even political parties, such as the [[Wikipedia:Pirate Party UK|Pirate Party UK]], whose core policies focus on reforming copyright and patent laws[https://old.reddit.com/r/emulation/comments/1bbn3bw/defending_emulation_rights_and_challenging/], supporting privacy, reducing government and business surveillance, and championing freedom of speech and expression.
==Notable Legal Incidents==
 
===Nintendo===
====Direct legal action====
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