MarkTime wrote:
Your country sweden is not the WHOLE WORLD.
This is what many people have been trying to drill into this discussion.
Sweden was an example of a country where EULAs are definately not enforceable. However, we've yet to have an example of a country (or even an individual state) where an EULA has been upheld in court.. how many are there?
There are many countries in the world, and in the vast majority of Europe and America, the idea that you can buy a service, license a product, is central to IP ownership. You do not BUY OS X. You buy a limited license to use OS X under certain restrictions.
Yes, but those restrictions are defined by copyright law; they are not defined by what extra conditions a company decides to spring on you, after the contract of purchase has already been completed.
It's all very well saying that the EULA is a legal licence, but you're forgetting that before that happens, the user has paid money in exchange for the right to use the software (as described by the laws of their country). So unless the terms of the EULA are presented at the time of purchase, they mean nothing - if the user refuses to accept the EULA, then big deal - they still have a right to use the software, and do anything that can be considered "fair use".
The way that the argument is supposed to go, as far as I can see, is that because the user clicked "I accept", then that means they *did* accept the contract. However this seems dubious to me, mainly because the user is forced to do this in order to use the product that they have a legal right to use, but also because clicking a button in a computer program isn't generally recognised as a means of necessarily agreeing with a contract (if I walk around with a sticker on my forehead which says "if you shake my hand, you must pay me £1000", if I managed to get someone to unwittingly do that, I'd be surprised if that would hold up in court). And also, this means that if the user gets round this (ie, installing without clicking okay somehow, whether it's done by installing manually, or hacking it somehow), then there would be no way they could have been said to have agreed with the EULA.
Getting more on-topic, the licence agreement for AmigaOS 3.9 says "This License allows you to install and use the Amiga Software on a single Amiga-labeled or Amiga-licensed computer at a time", which could be taken to mean that you aren't allowed to run it on an emulator. Though in this case you don't even have to click "I accept" to it; I just don't accept what this says, and stick with what the law allows me to do (or perhaps I could instead get round it by sticking an Amiga label on my PC;)
Remember that Sony were unable to prevent people from selling Playstation emulators - though I'm unable to find out whether Playstation games typically have a "you can only play this on a real Playstation" type EULA.. anyone know more about this case?