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vaio said: I said allmost all there are a few that have harsh laws but basicly they are not even close to yours, i´ve read the text in the games and they are riddicioulous. I am sure that you think they are reasnoable since you lived with it your whole life but for me that has lived without them my whole life I find them ridicioulous, insulting and very intrusive.
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Germany has way harsher laws than the US as an example. I don't find them ok because I have lived with them my whole life. I find them ok because I think developers should be paid for their work. Creating a copy of a game and giving it to a friend is terrible. You are rewarding someone for creating a game you enjoy by denying them a sale. That is messed up.
Also, you don't learn as much about the enforceability and questionable legality of eulas as I have by simply obeying them. Most eulas are actually illegal and thus unenforceable in the US. They over step their bounds and invalidate the entire contract by attempting to set restrictions they are not allowed to or failing to follow the rules needed to make them legal. Don't think that what they put there simply means it is suddenly legally binding. The fact that you have to agree to a contract you can't read to buy the game puts extremely heavy limitations on what you can put in the contract and still have it be legally binding.







