Originally posted by: Bulldog13
in before lock
Originally posted by: n0cmonkey
Originally posted by: Bulldog13
in before lock
Isn't saying that a bannable offense?
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.
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.
Same, saves me the hassle and unnecessary wear & tear on my CDs/DVDs and drives. megagames.com is another site.Originally posted by: Stangs55
this is not illegal. It's perfectly fine to do this IF YOU OWN THE GAME.
go here:
http://www.gameburnworld.com/
I do it for all of my games.
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.
"User agrees not to cause or permit the reverse engineering, modification, decryption, extraction, disassembly, copying, or decompilation of the Product"
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.
Originally posted by: n0cmonkey
Originally posted by: Bulldog13
in before lock
Isn't saying that a bannable offense?
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.
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.