Technically, there is a legal issue (albeit, mostly in the minds of wannabe lawyers in online forums) with even recreating Zane's ROM, which is why the people who did that work tried desperately to contain Zane about it, and I volunteered to try to reach Zane on their behalf too.
I have tried multiple times since Zane's disappearance to contact him, without success. His email addresses don't come back with any indication they are no longer valid. He has simply vanished.
No indication Zane has died, but there was no indication of that in the case of Paul Pratt (Mini vMac creator) having gone missing. A number of people online and YouTuber's too have commented about their search for Paul, but the conclusion is he may have passed away (in light of his age), and any living family members clearly are not tech savvy enough to inform the community about what happened to him (which is quite sad). That has inspired me to think more carefully how to handle my own demise, so the community is never left hanging about what happened to me. I still need people who are willing to take over certain accounts and pages to maintain them for the community. But I try to donate a lot of my work to the community so there's never any legal issues when it comes to other people using what I have written or published.
Paul was extremely protective of his work, but after Paul vanished,
@eric thankfully took the bull by the horns and did some fantastic work on keeping Mini vMac alive and kicking:
There's always a legal risk when trying to recreate something someone else has made. But some are willing to take that risk after repeated attempts have been made to find a missing person, especially when they have been missing since Nov. 2024 like Zane (and its now almost June 2026).
I do hope Zane is alive and well, laughing at all of us on a beautiful island somewhere out there; but in the meantime, we who are still in this hobby should have the freedom to build on
what appears to be the abandoned work of others. Legally questionable? Sure. But some say that about Macintosh Garden too, and who among us seriously want to take that down as a result? My stance about erring on the side of liberty may be controversial, but no two of us agree on everything, so no surprises there. Bending the rules is what makes things happen. It's all a matter of who has the rocky mountain oysters to take action regardless. Had there been no illegal blue boxes, Apple would not exist. Steve Jobs himself said that.