Dafuq is happen? Yurop puts the beat on digital & ACTA
Dafuq is happen? Yurop puts the beat on digital & ACTA
ACTA got da beatdown today from the EU parliament and the other day the COURT OF JUSTEEEEECE! said digital shit could be re-sold. 2 steps further from becoming the Teladi. Yay!
THEM deferred.
THEY will just try again with a different name in a year or three
when the masses are preoccupied with sports celebrity scandal x being hounded by bands of cannibals in the wake of economic and societal collapse or perhaps even
terrists
just like with sopa and its ilk
the revolving door of tyranny
when the masses are preoccupied with sports celebrity scandal x being hounded by bands of cannibals in the wake of economic and societal collapse or perhaps even
terrists
just like with sopa and its ilk
the revolving door of tyranny
- SenisterDenister
- Haha you're still not there yet
- Posts: 3487
- Joined: Mon Apr 23, 2007 3:03 pm
- Location: Cackalackyland
Re: Dafuq is happen? Yurop puts the beat on digital & AC
Please leave.A bland food-type wrote:dafuq
- Cimmerian Nights
- Striding Hero
- Posts: 1367
- Joined: Fri Aug 20, 2004 10:51 pm
- Location: The Roche Motel
I love you too, Dino.
The other part is the access to the install data of the software once the transaction is processed. Here I won't even hazard a guess other than, in essence, copyrighted data should have to keep functioning after a cut-paste job. In theory, this shouldn't be that hard to achieve in the case of established services like Steam or Itunes that have programs with multiple user accounts that allow access to a multitude of products, but something like Amazon?
The implications here are too many to attempt to predict how exactly any of this will take place, but the main thing is to know is that any activation code, DRM, EULA or any of that kind of shit that publishers bring up are (at least partially) void if they come in conflict with this. And remember that a fair bit of these only make themselves known after you've processed the transaction and not before, which already puts them on iffy legal grounds.
The DRM is a bit of a different beast altogether, and although I've read about interest in rendering it illegal, truth is I've seen nothing towards it, either a petition or court case, at least so far.
Those activation codes seem to be part of what's at stake here. The court case that led to the decision was, as best I understand it, the re-sale of software licenses and their validity after the original sale. Thus, in the case of games with an activation code that either prevents the game from functioning or allows extra online content, the measure seems to be that the original maker cannot deactivate said code or prevent access to part of the game's functions in the event said code changes hands.Cimmerian Nights wrote:Haven't publishers already weaseled their way around this type of thing with all the activation codes and DRM and online only/authentication shit they do?
The other part is the access to the install data of the software once the transaction is processed. Here I won't even hazard a guess other than, in essence, copyrighted data should have to keep functioning after a cut-paste job. In theory, this shouldn't be that hard to achieve in the case of established services like Steam or Itunes that have programs with multiple user accounts that allow access to a multitude of products, but something like Amazon?
The implications here are too many to attempt to predict how exactly any of this will take place, but the main thing is to know is that any activation code, DRM, EULA or any of that kind of shit that publishers bring up are (at least partially) void if they come in conflict with this. And remember that a fair bit of these only make themselves known after you've processed the transaction and not before, which already puts them on iffy legal grounds.
The DRM is a bit of a different beast altogether, and although I've read about interest in rendering it illegal, truth is I've seen nothing towards it, either a petition or court case, at least so far.