Whats sad is it doesn’t even take much knowledge of technology to know the whole of Sunbirds “product” was a terrible idea even outside of security concerns.

“Hey! I’ve got a brilliant idea for a product that absolutely could not fail!, lets reverse engineer one of the prime services of one of the most protectionist and litigious companies in the world and publicly advertise and try to sell it to their competition and potential users as some sort of magic compatibility layer”! What could possibly go wrong?

It was a worse idea than Dolphin thinking they were going to get away with trying to monetize their Nintendo emulator.

EDIT: I was mistaken about Dolphin looking to charge for their emulator when they put it up on Steam, as pointed out by a few folks in the comments. They were just looking to distribute it on the platform. Still seems like wishful thinking to me though when talking about something related to Nintendo and IP.

  • @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    English
    20
    edit-2
    1 year ago

    Dolphin didn’t attempt to monetize the emulator, it was being released for free as it has always been.

    What are you talking about?

    You are also talking like its dead or something. No, it is not nearly like that.

    • @flop_leash_973OP
      link
      English
      01 year ago

      Ah, my mistake, I could have swore they had said somewhere they were going to charge for it.

      Still, putting it up on Steam even for free when talking about something related to Nintendo seems like wishful thinking.

      • Gray
        link
        English
        21 year ago

        Just to note, the issue with Dolphin was that they had copyrighted decryption keys in their source code, which is why they were pulled from Steam.