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Forums - Sony - Should I get a psp?

both DS and PSP are great, anyone saying otherwise has no taste for good games...

Luckly for gamers, these two platforms are so different that they are not real competitions to each other... a bit like the Wii and the HD, the games are different.

in both cases though, the Nintendo console has 2x the sales :p



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Thank you, that was very informative.

But it in no way outlines how EULAs are somehow invalid in your country, it just outlines certain aspects of copyright law.



Khuutra said:
Thank you, that was very informative.

But it in no way outlines how EULAs are somehow invalid in your country, it just outlines certain aspects of copyright law.

You don't get it. EULA does not decide what you can do with your media, the local law does. If the law cites that you can make a copy you certainly can make a copy and wipe your ass with the EULA.

 



Esa-Petteri said:
Khuutra said:
Thank you, that was very informative.

But it in no way outlines how EULAs are somehow invalid in your country, it just outlines certain aspects of copyright law.

You don't get it. EULA does not decide what you can do with your media, the local law does. If the law cites that you can make a copy you certainly can make a copy and wipe your ass with the EULA.

You are not following me.

What I am saying is that the End User License Agreement is written in order to agree with copyright law for the region in which it is issued. That is why some (even most) EULAs are never challenged - because they do not come into conflic with copyright law. Copyright law determines what the EULA says. I'm not arguing on that point.



Khuutra said:
Esa-Petteri said:
Khuutra said:
Thank you, that was very informative.

But it in no way outlines how EULAs are somehow invalid in your country, it just outlines certain aspects of copyright law.

You don't get it. EULA does not decide what you can do with your media, the local law does. If the law cites that you can make a copy you certainly can make a copy and wipe your ass with the EULA.

You are not following me.

What I am saying is that the End User License Agreement is written in order to agree with copyright law for the region in which it is issued. That is why some (even most) EULAs are never challenged - because they do not come into conflic with copyright law. Copyright law determines what the EULA says. I'm not arguing on that point.

No, you are not following me. There has been a precedent case(not sure about the word) about validity of those agreements. Result was that EULA does not define the right to use your media. BECAUSE in that case, it did not comply with the Finnish law. If EULA says that you can not make a copy and local law says you can, EULA is nothing but a piece of toilet paper.  I told you what Finnish law says about your rights..

 

 



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Khuutra said:
Esa-Petteri said:

No, I live in Finland and I know a bit of local law. EULA is not valid at least in Finland.

 

That is an insult, I don't care what you believe.

Ah, I see the point of confusion. EULA isn't referring to any specific law, it's short for End User License Agreement - by purchasing or using that software, you implicitly agree to use that software in a way in keeping with the laws for your region. Yes, you do operate under an EULA, regardless of where you're from - the laws will just differ from place to place.

 

By Polish law you can make safety copy of software you own without permission of license owner unless the license agreement provides means of receiving replacement copies.

 



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