Originally posted by: Smilin
Couple of things, this first one is very important: Any post I make here is never ever representative of anyone's views except my own.
I fully realize that, I didn't mean to imply otherwise. I hope no-one mistakenly got that idea due to my comment, sorry.
Originally posted by: Smilin
When you buy a computer with a preinstalled OS part of the cost of that computer is going towards the OS that the manufacturer bought from Microsoft and then sold you. Since it helps MS sell OSs in volume and it helps OEMs sell computers in volume both entities are able to pass on the OS to you at a great discount.
Yes, clearly. However, whatever MS's policies are in the EULA, they don't affect the customers rights under the law. Most people don't fully recognize or understand that. MS has an actual, legal,
contract with their OEMs. If some grey-market copies of OEM Windows appear in the channel, it's their OEMs that are to blame for violating their contract with MS, not the end customers.
Originally posted by: Smilin
Part of that deal is that it won't hurt future sales of OSs or OEM computers. To ensure this they spell it outright in the EULA. You agree to it as part of the license to use it.
I don't agree to anything. I bought a computer. I didn't have to sign a contract.
Originally posted by: Smilin
That's the other kicker. You do not OWN the OS just as you don't own the music on a CD you buy.
Both are considered copyrighted content. Copyright applies to tangible, fixed expressions. It regulates duplication, public exhibition, and derivative works. It
does not regulate use. Many people forget this.
If I have paid for a license, for copyrighted content, then I may use it however I please. I can use the product manual for toilet paper, and the CD as a coaster, if I want to. MS can write whatever they like in the EULA, but unless they require me to legally sign it before purchase, as an actual contract ("compensation" factors in here too, legally-speaking), then whatever they say, doesn't apply to me. I obey the law, not Microsoft's whims. (There's a reason that various vendors wanted to push for UCTIA to get passed into law, because it would have, IMHO, wrongly, made the content of EULA's legally enforcable under the law. The absence of which, implies that they currently have largely zero force of law. I say "largely" only as a disclaimer, because there was one court case involving EULAs, but not shink-wrapped ones, IIRC.)
Originally posted by: Smilin
In both cases the owner is granting you a license to use it. Don't follow the license then you're not allowed to use it and you'll have to go invest BILLIONS to write your own OS.
Not true.
Again, a license allows me to
own a tangible copy of a copyrighted work. Copyright law does not regulate
use of that copyrighted work.
Originally posted by: Smilin
You might not like this law, but a law is a law.
Completely correct. But a EULA
is not a law!
(At least not until MS annexes the entire US gov't as a sub-division, which I could actually see happening if things continue the way that they have been going the last few years.)
Originally posted by: Smilin
I bet you like the law that stops artists from coming and breaking your thumbs if you steal a copy of their cd though eh?
That would be copyright infringement, which is illegal. I do not have the right to own a tangible copy of their copyrighted work, without a license to do so.
However, if I
do own a license, then I am allowed to listen to it in any manner, in any place, that I please. The artist/publisher/copyright holder, does
not have the legal right, with a disclaimer ("EULA") printed on a card inside the packaging, to inform me that I have to buy two seperate copies/licenses of their work, in order to listen both in my home, and in my car. The entire concept is ludicrous. Why people seem to think that MS has that right, I have no idea.
Originally posted by: Smilin
If it weren't for laws there really wouldn't be Windows or even Linux. Yeah that's right Linux. Without the law supporting the GPL no one is going to write something usefull just to have some jack@ss on his moral high horse come along and say, "Well I OWN this ISO now and I'm going to mod it and make a buttload of money and give you none.".
Please read the GPL carefully. It specifically claims that it
does not regulate
use of the GPL'ed software in question. Why? Because the force of law behind the GPL, is copyright law. And copyright law,
does not regulate use. Therefore, it would be laughable for the GPL to attempt to regulate use - in fact, just as laughable as MS's EULAs trying to regulate use. Most people don't see this very clearly though, sadly.
(Incidentally, the scenario that you describe, is nearly exactly what MS has done with certain pieces of BSD-licensed code.)
Personally, I think that creativity rings eternal in the human soul, and that "great works" would be created, regardless of IP laws. But perhaps that's just my philisophical side peeking out.
Originally posted by: Smilin
Now if you want to go take some "right of first sale doctrine" to court by all means do so. You'll get smacked.
The Germans did, and guess what? MS got the big smackdown from the courts.
Of course, you and I can see how the US courts and DOJ treat MS, so I don't necessarily personally recommend litigating this aspect of the law right now vis-a-via MS.
Originally posted by: Smilin
Larry, not sure if you read my post on the other thread or not but your quote:
"even, theoretially our own, before MS bought a majority share of our gov't" is exactly what I'm talking about.
Ahh.. but the problem is, our gov't purchased a large share of MS. Think pension funds.. if the gov't gave MS a major smackdown, it's stock would likely take a hit, they wouldn't be able to continue their stock-market game (MS makes more on their stock than they do selling their software, believe it or not!), and the gov't would be left losing out on millions of dollars for retirement funds.
That's my opinion on why MS got the kid-glove treatment it did, along with the various "polical winds" blowing these days.
Originally posted by: Smilin
Edit: One last thing... Man, I don't even begin to claim I read and understand every ounce of a EULA. That crap does not lie in the technical domain it lies in the domain of lawyers where it has to be by neccessity. Go blame lawyers for this crap.
Actually, in this case, I
do blame MS. They're the ones that started playing the "EULA game", and then everyone else followed. I pretty clearly remember reading in an issue of InfoWorld, about MS's licensing changes about something back in the day, and there was a pretty-large uproar from their customers. It was pointed out that Borland's license terms were a bit more sane and reasonable, "like a book" I believe, is how they generally licensed their software. That's really when all of the "EULA madness" started.
Originally posted by: Smilin
I think the Constitution should state that all laws must be understandable by everyone they apply to.
Yes, they should be.
Originally posted by: Smilin
Unless our govornment provides more than a free highschool education to everyone, I believe laws should be at a 12th grade reading level.
I think that is giving the majority of the current population
far too much credit. Sadly.
(Which is tangentally why I tend to stick around places like AT.)