where to get warcraft III Frozen Throne No CD crack?

Malak

Lifer
Dec 4, 2004
14,696
2
0
I'm just surprised this guy has been here for 5 years and is still asking a question like this.
 

Bateluer

Lifer
Jun 23, 2001
27,730
8
0
Technically, a No CD crack isn't illegal. I have many no CD cracks installed on my system. I hate having to dig a disk out to play a game, so I use No CD cracks for almost all my games.
 

Malak

Lifer
Dec 4, 2004
14,696
2
0
Originally posted by: Bateluer
Technically, a No CD crack isn't illegal. I have many no CD cracks installed on my system. I hate having to dig a disk out to play a game, so I use No CD cracks for almost all my games.

True, but there's no way to know this person has the game at all, so it's a topic we just don't discuss.
 

Schadenfroh

Elite Member
Mar 8, 2003
38,416
4
0
Originally posted by: Bateluer
Technically, a No CD crack isn't illeGAl. I have Many no CD cracks installEd on my system. I hate having to dig a disk out to play a game, so I use No CD cracks fOr almost all my games.

ProbbablY, that is What he is dOing. But whetheR it is Legit to go anD post it here is another question.
 

S Random

Senior member
Feb 5, 2005
236
0
0
seems to me he wants it without a CD crack because maybe his CD is too scratched up but he still has his CD key
 

Snapster

Diamond Member
Oct 14, 2001
3,916
0
0
Originally posted by: Bateluer
Technically, a No CD crack isn't illegal. I have many no CD cracks installed on my system. I hate having to dig a disk out to play a game, so I use No CD cracks for almost all my games.

I beg to differ. You'll find on most EULA something along the lines of

"User agrees not to cause or permit the reverse engineering, modification, decryption, extraction, disassembly, copying, or decompilation of the Product"

Modification of the software exe violates this.



 

JavaMomma

Senior member
Oct 19, 2000
701
0
71
Originally posted by: Snapster
Originally posted by: Bateluer
Technically, a No CD crack isn't illegal. I have many no CD cracks installed on my system. I hate having to dig a disk out to play a game, so I use No CD cracks for almost all my games.

I beg to differ. You'll find on most EULA something along the lines of

"User agrees not to cause or permit the reverse engineering, modification, decryption, extraction, disassembly, copying, or decompilation of the Product"

Modification of the software exe violates this.


EULA are not the law. A software company can write whatever they want in there. They are almost useless from a legal standpoint because a) so many people do not read them b) who installed it the software? who agrees to it? did my brother agree to it? am I bound to the agreement even though I never saw it? What if it came pre-installed on the computer am I still bound by the agreement?

Now if you break the EULA and you are playing on there servers then they have a right to ban you, etc. if they want.
 

Snapster

Diamond Member
Oct 14, 2001
3,916
0
0
Originally posted by: JavaMomma
Originally posted by: Snapster
Originally posted by: Bateluer
Technically, a No CD crack isn't illegal. I have many no CD cracks installed on my system. I hate having to dig a disk out to play a game, so I use No CD cracks for almost all my games.

I beg to differ. You'll find on most EULA something along the lines of

"User agrees not to cause or permit the reverse engineering, modification, decryption, extraction, disassembly, copying, or decompilation of the Product"

Modification of the software exe violates this.


EULA are not the law. A software company can write whatever they want in there. They are almost useless from a legal standpoint because a) so many people do not read them b) who installed it the software? who agrees to it? did my brother agree to it? am I bound to the agreement even though I never saw it? What if it came pre-installed on the computer am I still bound by the agreement?

Now if you break the EULA and you are playing on there servers then they have a right to ban you, etc. if they want.

Don't know how far you'd get through court pleading ignorance. You agreed that you read it when you clicked 'next', regardless if you actually did or not. Most if not all software pre-installed on machines are trial installs (eg from dell). If you buy a machine from someone else, it gets slightly more complex as you are transferring agreements.

End of the day, it's the developers IP. I'd like to see you go up against a company after modifying their software and walk away scot free.
 

JavaMomma

Senior member
Oct 19, 2000
701
0
71
Originally posted by: Snapster
Originally posted by: JavaMomma
Originally posted by: Snapster
Originally posted by: Bateluer
Technically, a No CD crack isn't illegal. I have many no CD cracks installed on my system. I hate having to dig a disk out to play a game, so I use No CD cracks for almost all my games.

I beg to differ. You'll find on most EULA something along the lines of

"User agrees not to cause or permit the reverse engineering, modification, decryption, extraction, disassembly, copying, or decompilation of the Product"

Modification of the software exe violates this.


EULA are not the law. A software company can write whatever they want in there. They are almost useless from a legal standpoint because a) so many people do not read them b) who installed it the software? who agrees to it? did my brother agree to it? am I bound to the agreement even though I never saw it? What if it came pre-installed on the computer am I still bound by the agreement?

Now if you break the EULA and you are playing on there servers then they have a right to ban you, etc. if they want.

Don't know how far you'd get through court pleading ignorance. You agreed that you read it when you clicked 'next', regardless if you actually did or not. Most if not all software pre-installed on machines are trial installs (eg from dell). If you buy a machine from someone else, it gets slightly more complex as you are transferring agreements.

End of the day, it's the developers IP. I'd like to see you go up against a company after modifying their software and walk away scot free.


It is becoming more common to be able to plead ignorance with EULA. There have been studies shown that less then 1/1000 people read them. Second the software company can write whatever they want in there and that does not make it law. Plus many minors click yes to them even though they can not sign a legally binding contract.

EULA have very little weight. We talked about them in my computer ethics class last semester. They are more like an agreed set of terms and conditions. Like I said if you break a EULA as in the case above you'd be giving Blizzard the right to ban your CD-Key for example. Or in the case with XBox and Microsoft banning you from XBox Live! if you mod your XBox. Same sort of deal the EULA was broken and they can do that. It doesnt mean you are going to go to jail for modding your XBox.

Note: that I'm basing this on Canadian Law, I know you Americans have some screwed up stuff like DMCA and stuff like that... so maybe I am completely wrong when it comes to your country.