Showing posts with label French. Show all posts
Showing posts with label French. Show all posts

Sunday, August 5, 2012

Tribes: Ascend announces its Spanish translation

 http://i.imgur.com/dDhzU.jpg

Hi-Rez Studios has been providing its new products for gamescom and among them we highlight the future version in Spanish for MMOFPS Tribes: Ascend. With the German version of Tribes: Ascend currently in beta, Hi-Rez announced that soon will be followed by versions in French and Spanish.
"Our European community, for both games (Tribes and Smite) has grown very quickly, which is fantastic to see and we are working hard to add more support for players of non-English speaking. We are adding new servers Smite for Europe, and we are happy to have a beta version in German to show at gamescom. French and Spanish versions will be soon after the show, "said Todd Harris, Director of Operations at Hi-Rez studies.
Tribes: Ascend is a free multiplayer s hooter-to-play is available through Steam and it has garnered rave reviews since its release pocoss months ago. It is a sci-fi shooter game with extremely fast and frantic action in which lie still one second is death.

Wednesday, July 25, 2012

Google would have to sensurar the word 'torrent' and 'RapidShare'

 

The terms "torrent", "rapidshare" and "megaupload" can not be suggested when a person performs a search on Google. That is, should be eliminated as suggestions. That's what the Supreme Court has ordered the French in the music industry litigation against Google SNEP, whom he accused of helping to implicitly musical copyright infringement not filter those words.
 
What is the reason? The Supreme Court of France argues that Google provides (indirectly) piracy by not filtering the above terms, so the case was sent to the Court of Appeals which shall make the final decision for Google.

Indeed, in 2010 the trade association of the Recording Industry of France, SNEP, filed a lawsuit against Google, this was a way to force the company to filter out certain terms in their searches, noting that when users write the name an artist, Google added suggestions of words like 'torrent' or 'Rapidshare', facilitating piracy.

This case went to court that gave reason to Google before it reached the Supreme Court ruled that Google is not responsible for web sites that infringe copyright, but can handle it difficult for the public to find pirated content. It also could add more terms to the list of censored words if the appeal does not benefit Google. What do you think?