After some googl'ing it seems to me that emulators are totally legal - as long as they've been created entirely using reverse-engineering (everything else could be called stealing).
From Wikipedia: Virtual Game Station, PlayStation emulation software (sold to Sony, who bought it only after their lawsuit to stop it failed, and then dropped the product immediately)
So I don't think the legal fears are justified at all. PJ64 does not seem to contain anything that would be legally sensitive - not even a reverse-engineered BIOS.
Downloading ROMs and the BIOS is completely illegal, of course, but has nothing to do with the emulator itself.
If you have nothing to hide, you've nothing to fear ... now I don't know if the authors of PJ64 have (had) access to a N64 SDK, that would of course be highly illegal, and I wouldn't dare making the software commercial in that case either ...
The only thing that bothers me is that they develop a highly valuable piece of software in their spare time, put tremendous effort and energy into it, and then have to release it for free - for fear of legal issues :/
From Wikipedia: Virtual Game Station, PlayStation emulation software (sold to Sony, who bought it only after their lawsuit to stop it failed, and then dropped the product immediately)
So I don't think the legal fears are justified at all. PJ64 does not seem to contain anything that would be legally sensitive - not even a reverse-engineered BIOS.
Downloading ROMs and the BIOS is completely illegal, of course, but has nothing to do with the emulator itself.
If you have nothing to hide, you've nothing to fear ... now I don't know if the authors of PJ64 have (had) access to a N64 SDK, that would of course be highly illegal, and I wouldn't dare making the software commercial in that case either ...
The only thing that bothers me is that they develop a highly valuable piece of software in their spare time, put tremendous effort and energy into it, and then have to release it for free - for fear of legal issues :/