iainmet: Yeah, essentially though you cannot access this content without a username and password. If there was no username and password then anyone could grab anything from your shelf. So in a way it is a minor form of DRM to protect you as a consumer.
Barefoot_Monkey: That's not DRM; that's authentication. Some implementations of DRM make use of authentication and sometimes authentication is used for DRM, but neither of those is necessarily the case. The two concepts are mutually independent.
Yeah agree, I am just trying to make a point on how far you can take this DRM argument. There are new threads popping up on GoG forum, usually about 1 a week now going on about DRM or Steam or whatever else and how it is evil to its very core.
Granted as a consumer we dont have to accept DRM on software. However you will be missing out on a lot of decent new games.
On a side note :
Another thing to look at is your Operating System.
Hands up everyone that uses genuine copies of Windows Vista or 7
Every 3 months your Windows installation will contact the activation server to renew your license so it knows you are running a genuine copy. Same key used to many times and literally the genuine check box in system will go grey and you will have 30 days to buy a new license if you cant prove to Microsoft otherwise.
But I bet you are perfectly happy to use a genuine copy of Windows, or do you pirate everything that has any form of copy protection I wonder.