timppu: I always put all to devs and Humble guys also. Since you are from Finland too, maybe in here we are just not accustomed to all this charity thing, as we pay charity through our high taxes already (which are channeled to helping Spanish, French and German banks).
On the contrary, finns tend to be very charitable folk but we have plenty of charities of our own so we probably give money to local charities rather than their international or foreing counterparts. We also give lots to NGO's (yhdistykset) who work towads improving things locally, after all, we do have our own problems as well.
However, I don't think you find that many people here that actually support the massive aid packages (while portrayed as loans, no one really believes we get a cent of it back) we shovel into black hole that is southern Europe. It's not even charity as it helps only deptors that caused the Euro crisis in the first place. They should simply either default/write off all the depts to large financial institutions and countries or go backrupt and rebuild from there. All the money we've sunk there are lost anyway and sinking more only worsens our own dept situation and makes it more likely that we too fall when the inevitable catastrophe happens.
timppu: Bought. At least I now kept my long-time promise to buy SPAZ as soon as I see it DRM-free. :)
Does Humble Bundle usually keep their DRM-free versions up to date? Mainly I was thinking if the SPAZ developers still keep churning out new content and updates for their game, as they used to?
My older bundles have been updated since the bundle sales closed so, yes, games are being updated (same way as GOG does, ie. the installers are updated) but speed depends on the publisher as they are the ones who provide the patches.