> I believe it is unfair to benefit - especially financially - from a community effort, then turn your back on said community. It is your right, you are correct in saying so, but it is also a bridge that you are burning and you must be aware of that.
Correct is correct. It isn't their fault the rules didn't explicitly state rights in perpetuity. Retaliation based on vibe logic is not only childish but also in this case, illegal.
This person suggested the request for prize money returned and and awards rescinded. And from the tone and logic, no doubt they are doing more behind the scenes.
> my games were public, free, and accessible for judging during the entire competition period.
But the rules didn't say anything about this being limited to only the competition period.
> Submission will be published and kept online for free on the competition website, while you are free to keep working on it (and eventually charge for it/make commercial usage).
It seems that under US copyright law, the license is by default irrevocable if the contract terms did not specify any conditions for revocation. So in this case unilateral revocation of the license is not possible. I can also see courts taking the words kept online to imply long term or perpetual distribution.
Anyways if you look at the situation logically, this sort of contest almost always has all the past submissions and contest results as a resource for future contestants as well as something to browse interested people. If all that's left after the contest is over is the ranking of the winners, then I think that would be quite sad.
> they threatened to retroactively disqualify my games (which they did) and demanded reimbursement of the prize money I had won in 2023, claiming my games were no longer “available online.”
In fact this feels to be almost opposite of a threat, but actually a courtesy. The contest organizers are offering to basically undo the contract (basically erasing the contest submission) without any penalty, something they aren't obligated to do at all. They could just as easily just say "pound sand" and keep hosting the rom forever.