Changes
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
NonDespite this, non-commercial licenses have long been seen as a desirable or even essential option for by some emulator developers, either to specifically pre-empt others from bundling their code into a payware package (even though this would also be a flagrant violation of the GPL3) or using it in a pre-built [[Emulation Boxes|emulation box]] without their explicit permission, or because they simply haven't considered the possibility of any more legitimate commercial use cases for their projects. Or sometimes they do it out of caution that the original hardware manufacturers manufacturer could take them to court. This is , despite the fact that [[#Legality of emulation|their the manufacturer's only grounds to stand on is whether the underlying technology behind a console is patented]].
→Non-commercial software
</blockquote>
Whatever reason the dev gives for a non-commercial clause in the software license, it ''should'' be of no consequence to the average end user who's just running a free emulator on their PC for their own use. Some specific circumstances, such as a developer who's making a brand new commercial game for an old system and using an emulator to test it in lieu of real hardware, ''might'' be exceptions to this, but that's where it gets pretty murky from a legal standpoint.