The Internet Archive ROMs are not "legal," but they serve a vital cultural purpose. They are a time capsule of interactive art that corporate owners have largely abandoned. If you use them, do so thoughtfully: respect living creators, buy what you can, and treat the Archive as the fragile library it is—not a free-for-all download hub.
They argue that they operate under "fair use" and act as a library . Libraries have special exemptions to copy and lend media for preservation and research. They also emphasize that they provide access to "out-of-print" and "abandoned" software—games that are no longer sold or supported by the original publishers. internet archive roms
The Internet Archive has faced legal pressure over book lending (the Hachette v. Internet Archive case), and that ruling could set a precedent for software. If the courts decide that controlled digital lending doesn’t apply to ROMs, the Archive may be forced to delete terabytes of gaming history. The Internet Archive ROMs are not "legal," but