WildW
Senior member
Originally posted by: skace
Casual piracy is not the same as the warez/cracking scene however it is just as important. It is the casual person who copies a music CD to give to a friend or let's every friend they know borrow their game. It's the most dangerous aspect of piracy because it can occur on a much more massive scale than nitch hardcore cracking piracy.
You are right of course, casual piracy has historically been rampant, and it isn't fair on developers. I do worry though that some folks seem to present the attitude that anything that denies potential profit from game developers is automatically piracy.
It is not piracy to lend games to your friends, in the same way as it isn't piracy to lend your friends anything else. . .books, CDs, or an umbrella. It is not piracy to give games away when you're bored of them, or to sell them on eBay.
What the game developers have done, through limited installs and non-transferable licencing, is to make something that is inherently legal (selling your old software 2nd hand) impossible, in order to try to make more money.
Software purchases with EULAs that state you're only licencing the right to use software are legally dubious. In the US at least First-sale doctrine has long established that software purchases are just that - purchases with the right of resale. Publishers who do this are just trying to exploit people for as much money as they can get.
What on earth was wrong with games that just needed the disc to be present in the drive before they'd run? PC games haven't been casually copyable for a long long time.
