Roander said:
sethisjimmy said:
I get that Target shares some blame in it, but that doesn't absolve this guy of all responsibility. It's like if someone left the keys in their car and you just drove off with it, then posted selfies all over facebook. You wouldn't just get off scot-free.
This is NOTHING like that. He paid for and legally owns the console. This would be like if he bought a car and the dealer delivered it to him a couple weeks early so he took a few pictures and drove it around the block, then had his license taken away for 'violating the terms of service'.
I'd like to know which part of the terms he violated, actually. It seems strange that they'd have a clause in there about using the console before the launch date. Especially since in order to read and agree to the terms you would have to use the console.
That part in bold is actually a matter of debater as far as companies and a large chunk of users see it. he doesn't own a thing, just purchase the limited use rights of the hardware which are subject to change according to the actual owner, Microsoft. This all ties back into why digital distribution is a bad idea in most cases, but that would be getting off track.
Point is that unlike the consoles of yesteryear these things are numbered and tracked, and all the user is doing is leasing it, ownership is apparently not the case anymore. My guess is there is a TOS somewhere that doesn't require a console's usage to read, maybe in a manual, insert, or on their website. More often than not a large corporation like Microsoft and it's legal team can use that against anyone at any time as they see fit. I read there are law protecting people from that in the UK, but in America all rights are reserved by the company and not the purchaser.
Not saying it's fair, I don't think it is, but a lot of people do, and support these kinds of actions, including the users restricted by such policy.