EFF wants to grant players power to maintain abandoned online games

Publishers of games that have an online component may be forced to hand them over to gamers if they cease to support them.

Gamasutra reports that the Electronic Frontier Foundation has filed legal paper seeking six exemptions to the Digital Millennium Copyright Act, one of which seeks exemptions for games "that are no longer supported by the developer, and that require communication with a server".

If approved, the result would be that gamers would be legally allowed access to the code of games that have had their servers shut off for the purposes of "continued play, preservation, research, or study".

The claim legally hangs off the fact that server communication protocols are not covered by copyright protection.

MMOs with a ‘persistent world’ are not included in the legal paper.

About MCV Staff

Check Also

4e0bbb16 75b8 b27f da55 c34a7c24cd3b [Industry news] XDS 2026 Insights Report is now live

[Industry news] XDS 2026 Insights Report is now live

The 2026 XDS Insights Report examines how external development partnerships are evolving as they become a core part of modern production pipelines. Based on input from 250+ industry professionals, the report shows an ecosystem moving beyond delivery risk and into a new phase shaped by coordination, governance, and long-term collaboration.