• TachyonTele
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    6 hours ago

    Is it a blanket statement for every purchase regardless of what game it is?
    If so, that’s completely useless.

    • Ephera@lemmy.ml
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      5 hours ago

      It informs customers, that licensing a game on Steam is not like buying a pair of pants on pantsshop24.org. That’s what it’s meant to do.

      • TachyonTele
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        3 hours ago

        I thought it would only apply to certain games. I feel like it’s just normalizing it rather than really being educational. Now companies can go fullboar with games only being a license and just point to the disclaimer as an excuse.

        • Petter1
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          1 hour ago

          You only buy a license to watch/listen media private in most cases. Even if yo buy a DRM free copy of a film/track/game, you only have a license to consume it private. If you want to show (or share) with public, you need another (way more expensive) license to do that legally.

          The only difference is, when you only stream the media or there is DRM on the files, it is not possible to archive it easily and the danger of lost media is far greater.

          • TachyonTele
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            58 minutes ago

            Dude, you just cannonballed into the Achualy pool. You know that’s not what we’re all talking about.

      • TachyonTele
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        3 hours ago

        Those are like a real life Navi from Zelda.
        “Hey! Link!” one every site is annoying.
        That crap really needs to be a browser setting.

      • The Octonaut@mander.xyz
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        5 hours ago

        GOG themselves literally said that you do not, even very recently. You own a license like every other customer, and it can be revoked at their discretion.

        GOG choose to exclusively sell games for which they can sell DRM-free versions, which is a great option for consumers. It is not a straightforward decision however as this is, whether it is a priority or not, a tradeoff for the things that Steam integration provides - cloud backup, mod workshops, multiplayer functionality etc.

        Steam also sells plenty of DRM-free games, and offer customers the informed choice when selling Steam DRM and Third-Party DRM controlled game licenses.

        This is not an argument that Steam or GOG are objectively better. But it is a straightforward lie to state that the license you buy from GOG is legally different from the one you buy from Steam. What is different is the possibility or otherwise of DRM software being used to control your adherence to the license.

        • TachyonTele
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          3 hours ago

          You’re like one of three people on Lemmy that understands this. I always get piled on whenever I bring it up.

          • The Octonaut@mander.xyz
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            3 hours ago

            It is usually also followed by “but I can download my installers and then I can have them whenever I like” as if it’s a sane idea to store terabytes of offline installers for the day that GOG goes out of business.

            I mean, I also have terabytes of offline installers for the day that Steam or GOG go down. On other people’s computers. In a, uh, distributed distribution system.