dublish
Posts: 3
Joined: 12/10/2013 Status: offline
|
quote:
ORIGINAL: aaatoysandmore What you bought was merely a license to play a game, if you had actually bought the game you would have the right an ability to sell it. If you read the EULA of Steam you do not have that right or ownership of the game. Most people don't read the fine print and that is why they praise steam so. You have a library of licenses, but you do not have a library of owned games. Steam can take them away from you at any time and there's nothing you can do about it. First, Steam's EULA (steam_install_agreement.rtf in your Steam folder if you need help finding it) applies only to the Steam program, and not to any software purchased or downloaded through Steam. Those have their own license agreements. Second: quote:
ORIGINAL: Slitherine End User's Agreement SINGLE USE SOFTWARE LICENSE AGREEMENT SINGLE USE SOFTWARE LICENSE AGREEMENT READ THIS SOFTWARE LICENSE AGREEMENT ("LICENSE") CAREFULLY BEFORE PROCEEDING TO INSTALL THE SOFTWARE. BY PRESSING "AGREE," YOU AGREE TO BE BOUND BY THE TERMS OF THIS LICENSE. IF YOU DO NOT AGREE TO THE TERMS OF THIS LICENSE, PRESS "DISAGREE". THIS LICENSE AGREEMENT IS A LEGALLY BINDING CONTRACT BETWEEN YOU AND SLITHERINE LTD. AND/OR ITS SUBSIDIARIES, AFFILIATES OR SUB LICENSEES. 1. General. This software product in its entirety is copyrighted and is protected by international law. The software and any accompanying documentation or media including this License whether on disk, in read only memory, or in any other form is licensed, not sold, to you by Slitherine Ltd. and is for use only under the terms of this License. Slitherine reserve all rights not expressly granted to you. The rights granted herein are limited and do not include any patents or intellectual property rights. Slitherine expressly retains ownership of the Software itself. I've bolded the relevant sentence there. All you're getting from Slitherine (or Paradox, CA, EA, and every other software publisher in the world) is merely a license. Third, the right to sell used software licenses is still in a legal grey area. The European Court of Justice ruled last year that first acquirers, second acquirers, and any subsequent acquirers of a license retain the right to sell it (unfortunately I'm not allowed to link to the text of the decision, the case was UsedSoft GmbH v Oracle International Corp.). I'm not aware of any similar legal decisions in the US or UK, but it's certainly not definitively settled.
|