Whatever you think about Origin...go go German gamers. This is how consumers make their voices heard. A bit of dignity, a lot of outrage and actually following through on your cries of boycott.
Or Demon Seed :3samsonguy920 said:Ask yourself, would a sentient program find your wife hot? Watch Saturn 3 [http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0079285/] and you may have found the answer.Hank Wants Pie said:Origin is keeping track of my data on my computer?!
Wait a minute...
Is it going to develop sentient behavior?
Is it soon going to start craving for freedom outside the bonds of my hard disk?
...
Is it going to impregnate my wife?
The complaint (from my position at least) isn't just the data collection. Steam has an opt-in data collection system (the Steam Hardware Survey) that I allow to run when it prompts me to without issue. I do this because I know that the information collected will stay with Valve to make my customer experience better.Frehls said:I'm just going to cut this part of the quote out seeing as it's huge.
Let's just stop overreacting
1) I still don't know why it's necessary to collect ANY personally-identifying information.EA via article said:Now EA Germany has responded by updating Origin's EULA to ensure both "clarity" and "legal compliance." In a statement, the company said that, "EA takes the privacy of its users very seriously. We have taken every precaution to protect the personal and anonymous user data collected."
lots of people have been saying that, but go look at others' rebuttles:Sgt. Sykes said:Yet if the same thing, and worse, is done by Valve, they're praised like gods.
Yeah, that's fair I guess.
In the original eula you had to agree that they are allowed to sell said data to other companys. Now its just for persional marketing research, like what income groups buy our products, how much do they spend on other things etc.Clonekiller said:Just wondering, why the heck would EA WANT your private data?AndyFromMonday said:It's funny how people are actually defending EA. I guess privacy and consumer rights are soon to be a thing of the past.
More to the point, they should provide EULAs before the monetary transaction is complete. You can't normally view them until after you've paid for the thing. That has to be wrong in some way.Torrasque said:Its stupid to highlight any part of the EULA, people should just learn to read them instead of clicking and agreeing blindly (don't worry, I do it too)
All EULA's can be found online, on company websites. So, no. It's shown again, as a "Hey, you read this, right? Check off that you read it."Danny Ocean said:More to the point, they should provide EULAs before the monetary transaction is complete. You can't normally view them until after you've paid for the thing. That has to be wrong in some way.Torrasque said:Its stupid to highlight any part of the EULA, people should just learn to read them instead of clicking and agreeing blindly (don't worry, I do it too)
The idea of the software EULA has never been challenged seriously in court. Some analysts think that if it was, it might face some serious problems as it is pretty common knowledge that people don't read it. Nor are laypeople expected to understand the legal terminology in the EULA.Frostbite3789 said:All EULA's can be found online, on company websites. So, no. It's shown again, as a "Hey, you read this, right? Check off that you read it."Danny Ocean said:More to the point, they should provide EULAs before the monetary transaction is complete. You can't normally view them until after you've paid for the thing. That has to be wrong in some way.Torrasque said:Its stupid to highlight any part of the EULA, people should just learn to read them instead of clicking and agreeing blindly (don't worry, I do it too)
Well, here's the thing, EA. I understand you may be concerned about cheaters, but there are other, less invasive ways of determining that, since "cheating" is by its nature going to be something that alters the game- the software you created- or the data passing back and forth to and from that game."We do not have access to information such as pictures, documents or personal data, which have nothing to do with the execution of the Origin program on the system of the player, neither will they be collected by us," it continued. "We have updated the End User License Agreement of Origin, in the interests of our players to create more clarity."
...What standard is that, exactly? The EULA standard that "we told you somewhere deep in the mire of a ten page document in New Standard Legalese exactly how we were going to screw you, so stop complaining"? The "sure, we're taking loads of information from you, but rest assured, we're your friend, and anyone else we pass the info onto will get the parts that can be traced back to you redacted" standard? Perhaps the "We're EA, and we have such a big chunk of the entertainment software market that if we say something is industry standard, it effectively is as of the moment we put it into practice" standard?The statement also notes that Origin's privacy policies are "industry-standard"
well how is it worlds problem that yousilverbullet1989 said:sigh... this again... im sorry but i couldnt care less what origin does.. i have a facebook acount, i have a steam acount, i have a itunes acount, my info is prob passed around all over from those companies yet origin keeps taking the flak for something that just about every other company does