@MarkTime
What if I am allowed to break a contract in my country...so what, do only laws govern your values, or is your word and integrity important on a level above the law?
That's a spurious argument. According to you, it is the moral obligation of a user to respect a EULA, even when the conditions imposed by that license are illegal in his country.
That's utter hypocrisy.
Either the law is the final standard by which actions are judged, or else people get to make their own moral judgments. You can't have a bit of both, whichever suits you best.
The point that has been made is fair: a lot of American products are sealed with a sticker that says that by breaking the seal you agree to their license, which in most cases cannot be read until
after you have broken the seal. The vast majority of courts in the vast majority of countries will throw out that clause for a start, as it is blatantly illegal.
Furthermore, if the law of any country allows the use of certain software under a "fair use" clause, even if that breaks the EULA, the user is NOT a pirate and not doing anything wrong.
If companies want to make their EULAs respected, they should ensure that they do not contain any clauses which are illegal in any country in the world. (Now there's a challenge for you).
Having said that, I agree that people who are ready to break the Apple EULA should not whine about the Amiga Inc EULA being broken.