LOL. I needed a laugh.WaruTaru said:Your reason to do something is based on the legality of said action, yet when the law says that action is now illegal, you choose to ignore it for your own convenience?Crono1973 said:Me wanting to save money by buying used is reasonable. On the other hand, me wanting to save money by pirating the game would not be legal. My example is designed to show that me wanting to save money doesn't condone "by any means possible". Likewise, it is reasonable that publishers want to increase sales and make money but it is not reasonable to punish customers to do it as it will only lead to some people resorting to piracy to get the full game. No one would need to do that without this restriction.
Also, do you know what is protecting software from piracy? The EULA. By saying that it is not enforceable unless it went to court, that means pirates could pirate away all those software until they are caught and brought to court. If the EULA is not there, all the other Intellectual Property law can easily be bypassed with some modification on the software itself.
Oh, you were serious?
I don't understand your first sentence (other than as a joke). Where did I say I ignore legality for my own convenience? Anyway, reasoning and legality are not the same thing. For example, it is legal (as far as I know) for publishers to mess with ownership rights by reducing the value of a product after you buy it but I don't think it is reasonable.
No, what makes software piracy illegal are copyright laws. Do you know what those do? They prevent people from making illegal copies and selling or giving them away. In other words, the outline who can make legal copies and who can't (save a backup). The EULA is powerless unless YOU give it power.