@marktime
If you don't think you have a valid contract, in the EULA, in your country.....Then you simply don't have a contract at all. A contract to use the software on an AmigaONE, didn't materialize out of thin air, certainly.
Don't you see, no contract, means no contract!!!!
license agreements are valid in all euorpean countries, these types of arguments 'it's legal in my country' are very hard to counter, because I readily admit, I don't know the laws of every country of the world. but its by and large BS.
I didn't say thay EULAs weren't valid in Sweden in all cases. I just said that EULAs you can only agree to after you've paid for the software aren't valid.
I actually think this is a good thing. What if you buy an OS for a lot of money and when you get home the EULA says that you can only use it every other sunday between 2 and 3 AM? You've just paid for something that you can hardly ever use and you had no idea these restrictions were there until you tried to install it. At best it's a hassle to get your money back, at worst you don't see that money again.
If you knew about this EULA before you paid for your software you would never have bought it and bought something else instead better suited to your needs.
europe and america both have very strong intellectual property laws, and don't allow piracy.
The reason I will be fairly vocal on this subject, is I am looking for practice in making a certain point clear.
Its obvious to me, that many people feel piracy is OK, and thats life....but many people don't really understand why its wrong, and so its good to sharpen ones skills on this point.
I don't think it is piracy. If you paid for OS X and want to use it on your AmigaONE instead of your Mac, it is still paid for. If you use it on both your Mac and your A1, then it would be piracy (which would most certainly be illegal here in Sweden).
For example, spending $100 to buy a license for using Mac OS X on a single piece of apple branded hardware, allows you to use Mac OS X for whatever you want? nooooo, not really.
can you buy a 10 person license and use it for 15? Is that OK? Can you buy an upgrade license for XP, and use it to make a full install on an OEM machine?
Not if you have agreed to the EULA in a legally binding way (before you paid for the product). But I think it is actually up to the software company to ensure that their EULA is valid.
Should I just agree to everything that is in the EULA just out of the godness of my heart?