Here's my take on this. It's a rather loose collection of thoughts and emotions so bear with me.
Installation keys and cd checks I barely notice anymore, honestly. This is, to me, the way things have always been. I am also aware of the limitations to these systems.
Once I purchase media, then I own it as long as I live. I don't think games are any different than books or video tapes. Without artificial limitations, digital media can be be reproduced, emulated, updated, and widely distributed indefinately. And it needs to be. With the speed at which technology is changing, without allowing some leeway for consumers to maintain their own collections then things get lost and destroyed. There are plenty of stories of movies, shows, books, and other literary works being lost forever because there was no one with permission or ability to make copies of the works or else all the laborously made copies were destroyed (or irreparably damaged) in some disaster. (Star Wars, NASA moon landing tapes, burning of the library in Alexandria.) The source code for several games has already been lost by the parent companies. With digital media, that doesn't have to happen.
As far as the reasons that these things need to be preserved, these creations have impacted us, many of us since a young age. They show who we are and who we were. They're shaping our culture as well, you don't have to look farther than PAX or Blizzcon to see that. Allowing these dreams to be lost without fighting it in some way would be awful. These are things I want to keep, to show my children. To show everyone's children. These are the fairy tales that our kids will grow up on. And if something so trivial as a format change or a collection of words written on a paper is going to keep me from sharing these experiences with future generations because the company implements a method of preventing the games, books, movies, whatever from working without meeting very specific requirements then I cannot agree with it.
Post edited December 04, 2009 by Syrra