this post was submitted on 23 Jan 2026
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Looks like the Ghostrunner developers also have an issue with paid mods running off their IP.

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[–] Zikeji@programming.dev 62 points 3 days ago (6 children)

If he had a generic mod that happened to support Cyberpunk 2077 / that other game that got him DMCA'd, I'd agree. But he's using that IP, name, etc. to market his product and sell it - the publisher is well within their right to not want to be associated with that.

A DMCA (copyright) troll has a much different connotation than what these two publishers are doing.

[–] ultranaut@lemmy.world 12 points 3 days ago (3 children)

He kind of does, doesn't he? His software supports 40+ games, it's not just Cyberpunk. There's no Cyberpunk content in his mod, it's just software that manipulates other software. It seems insane that people are supporting this as a legit DMCA takedown, and that the response has been to pirate his software like that is somehow now justified by him allegedly violating CDPR IP. I don't get it at all. If he was distributing a modified version of their game that would be one thing but it's software that allows users to modify a variety of different games they have a license for, which is obviously something else entirely.

[–] Zikeji@programming.dev 5 points 3 days ago (2 children)

He did violate their IP, just not with the mod itself but the advertising / his posts - at least in my uneducated opinion.

Take these examples:

https://archive.is/xKCtk https://archive.is/bfg53

He's using their IP to advertise his commercial product - a paid mod that supports their game. This use of IP generally isn't considered fair use. It's not the fact that it supports the game that's a violation, it was the advertising that was more my point.

And then as DMCAs generally go, companies overreact (like Patreon) and overreach. I don't think CD Project Red could reasonably have done anything if all this was was a footnote that his mod supports CP2077 and the advertising was happening via content creators plugging it - or otherwise off Patreon. But because he happens to use their IP to advertise directly, this was the outcome.

I'm not a lawyer though, there is probably more at play here.

[–] KairuByte@lemmy.dbzer0.com 3 points 3 days ago

That makes zero sense. DMCA the offending videos/images then. You can’t extend DMCA to related things that don’t infringe. That makes absolutely no sense.

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