NO PIRACY NETWORK
HOME | NEWS | CREW | LINKS | STOCKCAR | GP2 & CART | OTHER SIMS | MULTIPLAYER | ERIK'S EXPOSE | FEEDBACK | NO PIRACY The purpose of No Piracy is for sim racers to work together to remove sim piracy from the internet. The sites listed on this page all subscribe to the same creed...no piracy. These sites will not post or offer for download pirated software, and will actively work together to insure persons who DO post pirated software are stopped. If you find an incident of sim piracy on the net, or are a victim of one, you may email us the problem and we will keep you anonymous. Make sure, in case of freeware piracy, that you have examples to prove that the product being distributed is originally yours. If you have questions about copyright laws or piracy, please see the FAQ at the bottom of this page.
What these sites will do...
- Alert other members of incidents of piracy.
- Notify ISPs of offending individuals.
- Work together to discourage piracy.
- Work against individuals taking credit for freeware not written by them.
- Remove links to sites that are posting pirated software.
Here are some logos to post on web pages for support of No Piracy. If you place a logo, please have it link back to this page. Thanks for your support. If you wish to join No Piracy, all you have to do is send me your URL (email) and I'll place it on the page. Display the "No Piracy" graphic, and follow the examples above.
Transparent gif JPG SITES
- The Pits
- SimRacing Online
- The Sim Project
- Sim Racing News
- Victory Lane
- Mark Formo's Setting Editor
- Dane Johnson's ICR2/N2 Headquarters Page
- Mark's Fast Drying Paint Shop
- NASS97 Racing Series
- Computer Simulation Games @ The Mining Company
- Cyber Racing Sportscenter
- Mullins Motorsports Inc.
- Simulator Cyberworld
- Pacific Rim Racing
- Matt's Nascar 2 Page
- Matt's Grand Prix 2 Page
- Shadow Racing Inc.
- Sim NASCAR Racing Central
- The Checkered Flag
- Redick's NASCAR2 Site
- ThunderValley Motorsports
- The Yellow Flag
- The NASCAR 2 Project
- GP2.com
- Acid Rain's NASCAR Page
- NorthWest Racing
- Nico's ICR2 Page
- Team Black Squirrel Racing
- Jon Guest's NASCAR2 AI Stats
- Stunden Racing
- NASCAR 51
- SimRacing Ltd
- Alexander Motorsports
- Queezle's Pit Stall
- Dan's NASCAR 2 page
- Lord Wolfie Racing
- Stefan Moerkels / N2 Replay HQ
- Frank Amend's N2
- Chris Frederick's Racing HQ
- LightSpeed! MotorSports
- World Rally League
- Maximum Overdrive
- Nuke's Simulation Racing Site
- Winston Cup Extreme
- Joker's Wild Nascar2 Extreme
- Mark Gregory's Nascar 2
- Team Quantas Australia
- The Grandstand
- Cletus's Nascar 2 Page
- The Red Flag
- Koval Racing
- NASCAR Joe
- Chicken Farm Racing
- Koz's NASCAR Racing Site
- Scooby Motorsports
- Storm Motorgroup
- Matt's NASCAR Racing 2 Page
- The Brickyard
- Xtasee's Page
- Dustin's Nascar2 Page
- Tyler New's Sim Racing
- Starting Lineup
- Hughston's NASPRO Series
- DJ Motorsports
- Pontiac51's Site
- Gold's Victory Lane
- Lucky 13 Motorsports
- Storm Motorgroup
- T's NASCAR2 Page
- Gilbert Kaat's Worthless Site
- Team Bagus
- Speed77 Online
- Outlaw Designs
- SLS43's Sim Racing Paint Project
- Frank Murger's Sim Racing
- Hump Motorsports
- ROAR N2
- The WindTunnel
- Jaster D'an Motor Speedway
- Waylon24's N2 Page
- B's ICR2 Rendition Track Enhancing Project
- SBC Racing
- Pure Insanity Racing
- Rugers Nascar2 Page
- Racelane
FAQ
What is a copyright violation, or piracy? A copyright is a legal entitlement that says "this is my product and/or symbol, no one else can use it". It allows a person or company to get the benefits and entitlements to something they have created, and not have someone else steal it from them. It is a Federal law in the US, and in most other countries of the world. Most countries uphold the copyright laws of other countries, and it is beneficial for international commerce to do so. That means Daytona International Speedway can sue a company in Europe for using their logos. Piracy is taking a a software program that was written by someone else, and either claiming that it was written by the pirate, or distributing it for free, thereby bypassing the income that is legally due to the company or individual that wrote it. Here at NPN, we also consider freeware part of piracy, as someone else can steal an author's work and claim it as their own.
Why are you trying to stop people from posting tracks? We aren't, only trying to stop people from posting them illegally. There is a proper way to post tracks, and one that doesn't breach copyright or piracy rules, you can see that in a question below. We are not out to spoil everyone's fun. However, we are trying to increase awareness as to the proper way to display or post such projects, and help people who would like to do so. At The Pits we've been at the forefront of trying to bring racers new and realistic ways to race, and we'll do it legally.
What are the fines associated with copyright violations? Anywhere between $200 and $100,000...check out the law as to what it really says.
Aren't driver, sponsor, and track logos copyrighted? Why aren't you doing anything about that? Yes they are...but we do not bother with them for one simple reason...the companies don't seem to care about logos being distributed and posted. There are several reasons for this, one of them being that this is really free advertisement for a sponsor, track, or race team. So why bite the hand that feeds you, especially when it comes to free advertisement?
I've heard that you can post tracks...how can I do that legally? You can post tracks on the internet, however, they need to follow one simple format...that copyrighted Papyrus code is not being distributed as well. You can distribute everything in a package, so if you decide to change a track from one to another, instead of posting the entire finished product, you need to distribute it as a 'kit', that creates the new track using your new files, and the copy of the track that can be found on the user's hard drive. That way, you are not giving someone a way to get software which they originally did not purchase. This goes for all types of software, not just tracks.
I've written a program for a racing sim, and would like to copyright it...how can I do that? Go to the US Copyright Office, and take a look through here...this site will tell you how, and give you the forms to do so.
Who do you think you are? The net police? No, we're not, nor do we intend to be. We are merely advisors, and we attempt to help others learn the rules, so that they know the right and wrong way to post software on the internet. We are concerned only with racing software, not anything else. If you have any questions about copyrights, piracy, or how to properly create a legal software patch, please feel free to ask any of our members.