Freshmaker
I am Korean.
Which is pretty much SOP for these kinda things. Look at rom hacks. Usually they get a cease and desist only when they're pretty much done as well. That's not new or unique to Sega.Way to completely miss the point. It was THREE WHOLE YEARS, but you describe it as not getting "an immediate response"? Like they specifically stated, "We accepted the ESA policies regarding the DMCA as well". Sega had every opportunity to pursue action against them, FOR THREE YEARS, but they conveniently waited until a day after the project was released,
It *is* shockingly doltish to assume that a company would be cool with that.
My point was that stealing an IP wholesale is completely different.My initial point was drawing a correlation between this apparent new youtube issue and Sega's well-known previous similar activities towards fans and fan based projects.