
Originally Posted by
Mrenda
The important thing is that circumventing copy protection to get access to software you own, is as far as I know currently legal. So my friend could buy a game, play it, sell it to me for three cents, I could download it from ~where ever~ put my key in, when my key doesn't work, I could use cracks to play it. And all of that would be legal.
Where it gets interesting is at what point the license is a license, at what point the license is a non-term-limited license, at what point it's not a license but a service, and at what point it's not a service but a rental. Even if you agree in a EULA that you're only renting something until the whims of the rentor withdraws the game but the rentor is using this as a get-around-the-law bit of hackery, I have no qualms predicting that the court rules, "Actually, no, you're still selling something not renting it because of the effect of the agreement so the right of sale still exists." In consumer law the actual contract isn't as important the rights afforded to you by Consumer Protection Law.
Bookmarks