![]() According to the company, most of the issues they had with the liveries were related to the quality of the liveries itself. This prompted the developer itself to respond to the matter at hand on its own forums, in an attempt to explain why they felt the need to request for liveries to be taken down. As such, Flightsim.to started an inquiry in to its and Captain Sim’s rights, since the latter company was threatening further legal action if the liveries would not be taken down.įollowing this, many members of the community on several platforms expressed their dissatisfaction with Captain Sim’s legal threats and policy. ![]() ![]() The company also claimed that all liveries created by the community remain a property of Captain Sim. As per the statement from Flightsim.to, Captain Sim claimed that all liveries for the CS 777 need to be distributed via their own tool, called ACE, and that nobody is allowed to publish the liveries elsewhere. The initial debate about the developer and the plane were sparked when it turned out the CS 777 functionality is paired with the default 747 functionality in MSFS.įlightsim.to, popular for its many freeware assets, informed its community that Captain Sim had sent several legal takedown requests for Captain Sim 777 liveries. After the somewhat poorly received release of Captain Sim’s Boeing 777 for Microsoft Flight Simulator, the developer found itself in yet some more turmoil regarding the new plane during the last weekend.
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