part of the incentive is to get access to web design a 5 year old would laugh at? oh gee, how privileged! now I'm REALLY glad I never paid for that garbage.
the bottom line really needs to be, if you are offended, then you can easily head that way ------>
we live in a world filled with media supporting every level of entertainment and distaste that you can possibly imagine. it's to the point where fighting it is pointless and delves into the...
this guy has a video of him trying this many, many times, and failing. i'm assuming (probably more like pretending) that he's got it down to a science. probably not, but a man can dream!
Sony already did, months ago.
I think it's just a random legal thing thrown in. I can't really see this as being legal practice. EULA's often times throw in things that will never hold up in court. Pretty sure this is one of those things.
And on to the bigger picture. The...
Cops aren't well known for doing things legally these days, anyway. Just look around. In this country, you are free to do one thing and one thing alone: what they say. I'm sure they'll pass it off as voluntary: Don't want to fork it over? Don't apply.
I understand perfectly. Based on all the evidence that was surrounding this previously, to how they're talking now, it's easy to see where it'll most likely go. Calm down, tough guy.
It's taken into context with the rest of what he says.
"We do not have any such data for single-player, but I'm afraid there the ratio of pirates to legitimate gamers is undoubtedly much worse."
That basically says "The 100:3 ratio is individual pirates, not attempts".
Yeah, I'm sure reality would disagree, and say at least one is a conservative number :P
Also, dear escapist... I already own skyrim. Seeing that pop up every time i change screens does nothing for me, as buying it again isn't possible on steam....
Very, extremely misleading. There is absolutely no way to verify just how many of those failed connections are the result of multiple pirates, a single pirate attempting to create a crack, or (I bet they never thought of this) legitimate customers that had issues with the online verification...
I wonder the same thing. I dunno, maybe it's not as common knowledge as I thought, but I've seen it happening before it even became an internet gaming site news story.
It's been common knowledge for anyone who has played EA games online for any amount of time (at least in the communities I play in) that forum bans mean EA account bans. Happened a lot during BC2 especially. EA sucks, but the games they put out are top notch, so it's really hard to say screw em...
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