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Reader Comments (5)

Posted: Sep 16th 2008 8:10AM (Unverified) said

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Nope, not me, not anymore.

That's of course questionable of itself, but it's just too much of a bother, especially since you never know what got changed each time a new one pops up. A certain game I'm playing at the moment has one pop up when you start up the client, each time. I don't mind waiting for queues (yet), but common, I'm not reading that every time.

End of the day they may or may not hold up in court, but the developer still owns their game and will change what they will. If I get banned due to this, I'll just take my money elsewhere. I'm hoping common sense will see me through on the liability side of things.

Not a perfect solution, but workable from the gamer's perspective. I'm glad I'm not dependent on one of these companies as a provider for my services though.

Posted: Sep 16th 2008 8:23AM (Unverified) said

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I scan through it only if it is an agreement that is connected to money. For anything else, I don't bother. Why would I? I hardly understand it anyway. And I don't care. If they sue me, I'll run on a deserted island and form a pirate party.

Posted: Sep 16th 2008 9:46AM Otenth said

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Nope, don't read 'em, don't scan 'em. Yes, I feel a twinge about agreeing to something I haven't read, and about saying I've read something I haven't.

But in the end, I take the same fatalistic approach that recursive and dandellion have.

Posted: Sep 16th 2008 10:34AM (Unverified) said

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Generally I don't bother reading them - life's too short. I do however keep an eye on blogs that take note of bad eula problems and keep mental notes of which products to avoid. Boilerplate EULAs though these days are mostly hideous, so it's a gamble on if they're actually going to pursue the rights they assert. It's hard to find an end user license agreement that doesn't insult the signer.

Mostly I'm not worried though - EULAs are just a weapon in the legal arms race that IP and licensing has become today. It would be amusing to pit everyone who claims they own your intellectual property against each other. Does google own your myspace content if you browse with chrome? Heheheh :P

Posted: Sep 16th 2008 4:35PM (Unverified) said

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Aha! Some developers talk about why eulas are so borked http://www.worldsinmotion.biz/2008/09/agdc_property_rights_in_online.php

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