Posted January 05, 2015
Gersen: And, at least for now, they didn't say anything about changing the games EULA, they talked about updating the term of service of the website and related services (i.e. movie streaming, Galaxy, etc...)
It is _not_ just the for the website, it also covers the games. It explicitly says: "1.1 This Agreement is a contract between you and GOG
Ltd, 7 Florinis Street, Greg Tower, 6th floor, 1065 Nicosia,
Cyprus and applies to www.GOG.com, your GOG user
account, the GOG Downloader, the GOG Galaxy Client for
updating games, any games or videos or other content which
you purchase or access via GOG.com, the GOG web
forums, GOG customer and technical support and other
services we provide to you"
In 2.2 it also states that it takes precedence over the EULA coming with the game installer (in case those two differ).
Gersen: To avoid this whole new can of worms most companies take the "safest" route to use the safe and proven "pre-made" lawyer friendly formulation we see in most EULAs. Of course GoG could put an "exception" for Galaxy in their own EULA, as I doubt there will really be that many important trade secret in it they want to protect, but for the games themselves I doubt the rights owners will ever allow them.
10 years ago I doubted whether there would ever be a video game publisher who would agree to distributing games drm-free. :p Now just start with all those decade old games and simply ask the publishers to remove those useless prohibitions.
I mean, you can't tell me that companies are afraid that someone will reverse-engineer the "revolutionary" game engine of Zork to bring their own Zork clone on the market.
Post edited January 05, 2015 by immi101