Sierra pursues Half-Life OEM pirates
by Robert Mayer
Lawyers for Sierra Studios are "aggressively pursuing" websites and
individuals who have posted pirated copies of the OEM version of
Sierra's forthcoming 3D first-person shooter Half-Life. The game,
developed by Valve, is expected to ship later this Fall, but a special
version for bundling with video cards, sound cards, game controllers and
other PC hardware is going out to manufacturers now. According to
Genevieve Ostergard, Senior PR Manager for Sierra Studios, the
manufacturers who paid for the use of Half Life: Day One to enhance the
value of their products are furious that the game is now widely
available
on the Internet.
Within hours after the game arrived at magazines in the US and Europe,
details of the opening sequence and in-game screenshots (both of which
Sierra specifically enjoined magazines and websites from publishing)
appeared online. Shortly thereafter, the game appeared on pirate
websites
and usenet discussion groups. According to Ostergard, Sierra is seeking
"cease and desist" orders against any and all individuals or
organizations
who are making the game available illegally, and is asking all other
sites "in
the spirit of things" to honor the information embargo Sierra has
imposed.
Pirated versions of even complete, finished games are nothing unusual on
the Web; when LucasArts' Rebellion was still on its ways to stores
earlier
this year, for example, a pirate version appeared online, and even
multi-CD games like Origin's Wing Commander IV have shown up on
"warez" sites on the Web. Despite the best efforts of software
publishers,
piracy has proven virtually impossible to erradicate, or even to reduce
significantly.
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Posted 9/21/1998