OneOfNone said:
the emulators (as in the program that runs the files) themselves are rarely illegal. But the reverse engineering required to run a pirate warcraft server is. Which means the software itself used in the emulators is.
Now, if blizz had been providing you with server software to run specifically for private servers (which they arent, and wont), you wouldnt be in trouble, unless you did something stupid like try to make money off their software (like selling items/gold....)
She had it coming due to being exeptionally stupid. She sold items, she hosted a private server....
Also, you do not own the software. You own the box, the papers and the cd's. But you rent the client that you use to connect to blizzard servers. You can do anything you like with the physical copies, but altering the software itself is a no no.
Think of it like this. You buy a brand new Toyota. You can do anything you like with it, except reverse engineer the tech to put in your own brand of car that you sell to others. Because if you do, Toyota (and the others that own the patents you just stole) will be after everything you made off it, and then some. Just like Blizzard did to this person.
The server emulators are completely newly written lines of code, containing nothing from the original "Blizzard servers" and also containing nothing of the clientside code, everyone that plays on them still needs a copy of WoW (or whatever game) e.g. the Clientside portion of it that consists of all the art, levels, dialogue, NPCs and all that to run the game.
Blizzard can't own or enforce copyright on a completely rewritten software project that doesn't use any of their assets. Basically the only thing a server emulator does is offer an interface over the web that answers certain requests the client inquires, from simple logging in to what happens when you move your char a few steps into any direction to what happens when you take on a certain quest or get a reward...
I thought this was very clear (until now) and even backed by several cases in the past, and the main reason why none of this went over anything than a Cease&Desist letter at any given point, seeing as the defendant didn't appear to the summons or defended herself it might just be that said judge didn't quite understand the state of affairs...
They didn't alter or reverse engineer any piece of software (as they would have to have the serverside client off of Blizzards servers for that) but completely rewritten it, which was probably years of work.