You're not being screwed over, he is. That's the difference. If he gets sold a broken product, he should get a working one. That's law.Richard Groovy Pants said:How can you assume it's an "excuse"?Lord Krunk said:That's the thing that annoys me the most; the sort of person who pirates things to test them out, and then says that 'they're crap' as an excuse to keep it.Richard Groovy Pants said:I've been a pirate all my life because I have a system on testing games first before buying them, and sincerely most games which I pirate don't deserve to be bought. And yes, these include good mainstream games. I just have my standards too high.
Man, you know me better than I do! That's amazing!
In fact it is, depending on your morals.It's not justified, law or no law.
Just because you don't agree with it, it doesn't make it wrong.
Wait what? You just said "law or no law". This is a little contradictory then.On-topic, I would have to say that I approve in this situation.
The law still says it's wrong in most countries.
Go figure. I've never had any trouble in Oz.Richard Groovy Pants said:With PC games?Lord Krunk said:You're not being screwed over, he is. That's the difference. If he gets sold a broken product, he should get a working one. That's law.Richard Groovy Pants said:How can you assume it's an "excuse"?Lord Krunk said:That's the thing that annoys me the most; the sort of person who pirates things to test them out, and then says that 'they're crap' as an excuse to keep it.Richard Groovy Pants said:I've been a pirate all my life because I have a system on testing games first before buying them, and sincerely most games which I pirate don't deserve to be bought. And yes, these include good mainstream games. I just have my standards too high.
Man, you know me better than I do! That's amazing!
In fact it is, depending on your morals.It's not justified, law or no law.
Just because you don't agree with it, it doesn't make it wrong.
Wait what? You just said "law or no law". This is a little contradictory then.On-topic, I would have to say that I approve in this situation.
The law still says it's wrong in most countries.
I'm afraid it's not.
In the most known shops if you take back the PC game because it's "borked" then they won't accept it. You know why? Because of the Cd-key.
Yes, that little retarded system which basically serves for nothing is what's keeping people from returning games.
Arent you depriving the money for the maker of the game that he made and keep it to yourself?Samurai Goomba said:I never play the pirated copy anymore.
3. Piracy isn't stealing. Stealing is depriving one person of something in order to give it to yourself. Pirates don't take games away, they just copy them. It's copyright infringement or possibly illegal copying. Ever copy a page out of a library book or textbook? Ever copy most or all of a text? Congrats-you're the literary equivalent of a pirate. Ever copy a DVD, VHS or CD? Same deal. It's not theft, it's illegal copying.
I just bring that last point up because so many anti-piracy people like to use the "piracy= stealing" argument. And with that, I'm done.
This is 100% legal for the educational purposes, aslong as you keep the copies to yourself. It is not piracy.Samurai Goomba said:Ever copy a page out of a library book or textbook? Ever copy most or all of a text? Congrats-you're the literary equivalent of a pirate.
SteveDave said:So I have owned this game for almost nine days and I haven't played a single second of my game. Creative Assembly has been unresponsive to the issue and lets just say fuck Steam, Steam can go to hell. So now I am considering, for the first time in my life, pirating the game.
Maybe, but in the case of a possible lawsuit he might be able to issue a counter-lawsuit saying that the game he bought didn't work and tech support refused to help him. He might even win.Erana said:The thing that bothers me is that, legally, you could get in trouble for that.
In a situation like this, the rules themselves restrict the justice that they are meant to enforce.
It's only legal because somebody decided it should be. Copying 100% of a text to keep and use for as long as you want is no different than copying 100% of a game to ditto and ditto for as ditto as you want. The difference is that people who read books aren't willing to put up with unfair License Agreements and Terms of Use. Anything can become legal or illegal as long as enough morons push the legislature through.veloper said:This is 100% legal for the educational purposes, as long as you keep the copies to yourself. It is not piracy.Samurai Goomba said:Ever copy a page out of a library book or textbook? Ever copy most or all of a text? Congrats-you're the literary equivalent of a pirate.
I agree about copying old games that are no longer being sold or making the intellectual owner money in any other way. Not technically legal, but there is no harm done.
As for trying a (non-shareware) game to see if you like it, before you delete it again, that is the same as regular piracy.
Afteral, you decide how long you "try" the game, without the maker's consent. A day, a month, a year.
legally your allowed a back up of your games.Erana said:The thing that bothers me is that, legally, you could get in trouble for that.
In a situation like this, the rules themselves restrict the justice that they are meant to enforce.
That's really strange. I've never got that message with any of my steam games (both valve and non-valve), in the 3 years I've been using it. I've got similar messages when trying to download updates, but that's fair, any update server can be overloaded. Steam has not once blocked me from playing my games.Jamash said:What really 'gets my goat' is the few times when I've been unable to start the game because Steam is having problems with their servers. On a few occasions when I've tried to play my game, I've got the message saying "All our servers are busy. Please try again in a few minutes".
Nope. You can copy a 'substantial amount' for private use. This is usually not the whole or most of a book.veloper said:This is 100% legal for the educational purposes, aslong as you keep the copies to yourself. It is not piracy.Samurai Goomba said:Ever copy a page out of a library book or textbook? Ever copy most or all of a text? Congrats-you're the literary equivalent of a pirate.
hey, if you payed like, £20-£30 for a game that doesn't work, you have full right to pirate it.SteveDave said:I have never been for pirating of games but I have experienced a situation where I think I would be justified in pirating a game off the internet.
I recently bough Empire Total War (disc, not through Steam) on the fourth of March and ever since then I have not been able to install the game because there is something wrong with Steam (I don't want to get into details because that would make this post way too long).
So I have owned this game for almost nine days and I haven't played a single second of my game. Creative Assembly has been unresponsive to the issue and lets just say fuck Steam, Steam can go to hell. So now I am considering, for the first time in my life, pirating the game. I feel I am not really stealing since I bought the game and this way I can play it whenever I want without the permission of CA or Steam. That is what I am most frustrated about. CA is using Steam as some sort of DRM but Steam is soo intrusive that I feel like I don't even own the game. It is like I bought a glorified rental.
Anyway I'd like to get some thoughts and opinions on this. Also I would like to say fuck Steam or have I said that already?