Posted April 14, 2012
orcishgamer: According to US law, yes we can. Though clearly the onus is on you to not do anything to violate copyright while doing so (such as keeping a copy for yourself).
I understand it's not that way in some parts of the world but the courts have always held that if it looks like a sale of property, it is a sale of property with all attendant rights. The courts have only made one exception of which I'm aware regarding the purchase of business software to a businessman, who is presumably more sophisticated and the court did hold the EULA to be more like a contract in that single case (circuit court, though, it's not binding in any other circuits though could be used as precedent if the case circumstances can be argued to be similar).
And pretty much, yes, your "copy" is yours to do with as you please, just as your copy of a movie on DVD or book on a dead tree is. Really, in the US it's not nearly as complicated and business friendly as you make it out to be. Nothing in those cases specifically excluded digital goods. To change it case law would have to be made to show that digital goods were sufficiently different and should be treated differently. No one in content wants to try to show that if they can help it, it'd be a very hard, up hill battle.
Pheace: Then what are you selling exactly? The copy you downloaded, as I mentioned, is merely a copy. If you sell it, by burning it and then selling it or anything similar, then you're basically copying and distributing something, since you still have access to the original on your account on GOG. Unless you say you can sell that, but can you? Disregarding the fact that it would be impossible to sell any game individually on an account that has all your games, is it legal to sell an account to a service? (curiosity, not sure how it worked with MMO's for instance) And if you were to try, what's the likelyhood GOG is within it's right to end that service? I understand it's not that way in some parts of the world but the courts have always held that if it looks like a sale of property, it is a sale of property with all attendant rights. The courts have only made one exception of which I'm aware regarding the purchase of business software to a businessman, who is presumably more sophisticated and the court did hold the EULA to be more like a contract in that single case (circuit court, though, it's not binding in any other circuits though could be used as precedent if the case circumstances can be argued to be similar).
And pretty much, yes, your "copy" is yours to do with as you please, just as your copy of a movie on DVD or book on a dead tree is. Really, in the US it's not nearly as complicated and business friendly as you make it out to be. Nothing in those cases specifically excluded digital goods. To change it case law would have to be made to show that digital goods were sufficiently different and should be treated differently. No one in content wants to try to show that if they can help it, it'd be a very hard, up hill battle.
Look, you can argue for how you think it should be, or how you want it to be until you're blue in the face. I'm just informing you that this is how it currently is in the US (to the best of my knowledge). Things could change in the future, but right now this is how it is. It may very well work just as you like it in the EU, but in the US mondo84 is right (even if he did piss you off in saying so).