- Jan 9, 2008
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Publisher Sega has explained the ins and outs of the 'Uniloc: SoftAnchor' DRM scheme chosen for Obsidian Entertainment's espionage RPG Alpha Protocol, covering what it means for players and revealing plans to eventually remove the DRM altogether.
Uniloc: SoftAnchor will allow five active installations of Alpha Protocol at any given time, which can be deactivated either by uninstalling them or via a website. Online activation will be required only when the game is first installed, with the option to activate by "saving a file and transporting it to the computer that does have web access."
"We take your rights as a consumer very seriously, so we will provide a version of the game without license management (available as a patch) in around 18-24 months after release," assures Sega. "We can't be specific about the exact date due to business factors, but rest assured that we will provide an unprotected patch."
Read the rest here: http://www.shacknews.com/onearticle.x/63600
Not sure about you guys but this seems fairly reasonable given "other" failed DRM methods that have recently been used. I would imagine it will be cracked just a quickly as anything else but at least SEGA is keeping their customers in mind, and for that I commend them.
