Nintendo Once Again Seeking To Unmask Discord User For Leaking Content
from the keeping-it-in-the-news dept
Leaks can be both embarrassing and aggravating for any content producer, though we often see the most anger over this sort of thing coming from large corporate interests. The video game space is lousy with examples of this, but there is perhaps no more notoriously draconian respondent to leaks than Nintendo. The company has unsurprisingly suffered its share of leaked content and its response generally ranges from attempting to DMCA the leaks into oblivion — which never actually works — to unmasking and then bringing down the heaviest legal hammer it can wield upon the leaker. Lost in the sauce in all of this appears to be just how much this keeps those leaks Nintendo wanted to bury in the news, working at a complete cross-purpose to what the company’s stated aims are.
It gets all the more silly when there are months and months in between the initial leak and this sort of legal action. Game Freak announced back in October of last year that it had suffered a breach and that content ranging from internal employee information to unreleased information about past and future Pokémon games had been exfiltrated. Shortly after the announcement, some of the leaked information began appearing on social media sites, including on Discord. There a user going by GameFreakOUT posted a bunch of the leaked content to a Discord Server called FreakLeak.
Again, that was all in October of last year. In April of this year, six months later, Nintendo has petitioned the court to unmask GameFreakOUT.
Nintendo is asking a California court to force Discord to give up the identity of the person behind last year’s massive Pokémon data breach, known among the Pokémon community as the “Teraleak.” It’s called the Teraleak because of just how much information was released online; the leaker claimed to have source code for the upcoming game Pokémon Legends: Z-A (though they did not release it), as well as next-generation Pokémon titles, builds of older games, and loads of concept art and lore documents.
The purpose of the subpoena is “to obtain the identity of the Discord user ‘GameFreakOUT,’ who posted infringing content,” wrote James D. Berkley, an attorney for Nintendo. Alongside the declaration, Nintendo included a partially redacted screenshot of the Discord server, in which the user GameFreakOUT posted a file and told users to “enjoy.”
Can Nintendo do this? Maybe. We’ve made this point before, but the unmasking of anonymous speakers on the internet ought to carry with it a very high bar over which petitioners should have to jump. Unmasking anonymous speech should be done to prevent future or current injury, not merely to punish accused bad actors. That said, that determination will be up to the court to decide.
But the broader point is why Nintendo is doing this now six months after the leak. All this serves to do for the time being is to keep the leak, and the information in the leak, in the news six months after the leak occurred. Nintendo may want to go the punitive litigation route as a deterrence, I suppose, but exactly how productive would that be? Is it really going to stop the next leak from happening? And if the answer to that is “no”, then what the hell is the point?
The answer is probably not that deep. Nintendo is a company with a litigious culture on matters of intellectual property. It may simply be that the questions above were never even asked of itself.
Filed Under: anonymity, gamefreakout, leaks, pokemon legends, teraleak, unmasking
Companies: discord, nintendo


Comments on “Nintendo Once Again Seeking To Unmask Discord User For Leaking Content”
It was probable Pete Hegseth spreading out his circles from Signal
An arrogant corporate attitude can come back and bite you. Nintendo has a long history of mismanagement, relying on their artists and programers to carry the company. You really can’t find a bigger bunch of fools in the successful business world.
Dear Nintendo, can’t you just go back to making weak-ass handhelds and suing thousands of 4yr old kids for their birthday videos MAYBE having 3seconds of mario music in the background?
Your strengths are pretending your consoles are any good and hating your own customerbase with a deep deep despising passon. Play to your strengths.
grammar
” The company has unsurprisingly suffered its share of leaked content and it’s response generally ranges…”
“It’s” with an apostrophe? C’mon Tim, you know better._
That is why you use VPN and tor combined so you can’t be traced.
If they want a phone number to sign up, get a burner phone and use that and pay for the service using cash so there is no bank trail
Burner phones should be paid for with cash so there is no bank trail
Re:
FFS shut the fuck up already with the fantasy opsec you one-trick pony.