amok: 3) the problem here is that you are making a claim, and you need to back it up. I remember never being able to do as you describe (without doing certain things... which you still can do), and I am a 10+ years Steam user. If you are right, there should be an outrage at the time, but a quick google do not show anything at all regarding this particular issue.
2) even if small print, then it is disclosed. It is up to you to read (and understand) the small print on anything you buy.
1) What I meant is, back in [url=https://www.gog.com/forum/general/eff_wants_your_drm_horror_stories/post39 ]post #39 [/url]you said "Firstly it assumes Steam is optional, it is not. For 80% of major games it is the DRM. " which is not an issue. That was what I was responding to, this is monoply, not DRM. Which makes it a monopoly horror story, not DRM horror story.
I remember it well as me and the wife both used my account. She played her games and I played mine. It changed when they added achievements and the like. The social side of Steam was separate to the main client. Until then I cold have the client online on both computers and the chat online on mine.
When they changed it I had to rebuy her games.
As for noise. Its timing was perfect. Steam was optional. It was growing having about 7 million registered accounts, but still an experimental service. To be using the service you had to be a part of a minority. Broadband was a very expensive luxury, and to be frank most of its users fitted in with a certain social isolated sterotype. Some noise was made, i remember posting asking for some kind of family sharing system. However those post have long since gone.
Many people just went back to buying physical games. But Steam had got terminal velocity and kept growing, the majority of Steam users never knew anything else.
2) Steams TOS are not available at point of purchase, UNLESS you buy from Steam directly. I can walk to my local Game, buy Rise of The TombRadier and not see the SSA until after you've started to install. Yes I have the legal right to return, but the Store will not like it. I can buy a physical disc online and never know Steam is required. Its a life long contract yet has no real warning. Imagine buying a mobile and never seeing the contract until after you've paid for it.