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TEDR said:And the moral lesson is dont steal something if you intend to buy it later.........
The Dark Elf said:You really haven't a leg to stand on, I'm with Valve on this one.
i feel the same as barabis; why?barabis said:Why is this?
Audiophile said:if you really bought a new cooy, you can make a new account and install it on that one with the new key.
let he who has never downloaded an illegal mp3 throw the first stone.
No he's not, he's making you out to be a thief because thats what you are, you attempted to steal from Valve just because you couldn't wait or save up some money.cabe said:you're making me out to sound like i'm the scum of the earth. i assure you, i am not.
cabe said:you're making me out to sound like i'm the scum of the earth. i assure you, i am not.
the fact is that i didn't steal it, so what right does valve have to turn my $60 game into a useless set of coasters? what bugs me is that they let me go without repercussion, and then once i had bought their game they turned around and stabbed me in the back.The Dark Elf said:No he's not, he's making you out to be a thief because thats what you are, you attempted to steal from Valve just because you couldn't wait or save up some money.
You brought it on yourself and you will find no sympathy here.
nope, game didn't function at all. (the game didnt even install) just said "this cd key is in use" and nothing more.jgruen said:Did the "stolen" copy of the game function with the illegally obtained cd key? If not I would question the legality of banning 20,000 accounts. A more appropiate solution would have been to offer those 20,000 account holders the opportunity to purchase licenses.
cabe said:i originally posted this at steampowered.com's forums, however, as it seems this is too much of a hot topic for discussion over there, the thread was locked. :flame:
i've just gotten back from a week of thanksgiving vacation and was looking foreward to playing half life 2, however, i have discovered that my account has been disabled. there is only one reason i can think of:
i made the mistake of trying to install half life 2 with a widely circulated key on the internet. i admit that i should not have done this, but know that i fully intended to buy the game the next day (i'm a big half life fan and wanted the gordon box ) i'm not an evil software pirate, i was just up late and have no credit card. so, with no other way to get hl2 at the time, i figured why not give it a shot?
i DID legitimately purchase a copy of half life 2; and, if the account was disabled due to the 'bad' cd key, it seems unfair that the account wasn't disabled until AFTER i paid my $59.11 for a game which is now useless to me. (now how does THAT work!)
i just feel like there's some guy looking at a listing of all of the valve accounts thinking to himself:
"ok, now lets see.. he tried to use a fake cd key.. lets *wait* until he buys some more of our stuff, and then we can ban his account later on, so he'll have to buy it all again and we'll make a killing!!"
this kind of behaviour does not instill much trust in the customer, valve.
i will probably exchange the game for a new one at the store as i figure i've got basically no chance of getting my account back, and it won't be TOO great a loss as all i had registered to that account was CZ (which CS:S is, anyway) and just making a new steam account. that makes me feel a little better.
i'm just looking for you guys' opinions on the situation; has valve made the right decision?
cabe said:paying sixty bucks for a disabled game will leave people feeling cheated and not willing to buy from valve again.
Everyone's saying things like this, including Valve. Valve is willing to take small losses in many different areas, because they are all just "small losses."Pi Mu Rho said:Hardly a great loss.
cabe said:i get the impression that some people think "if you tried to use the bad cd key, valve can do whatever the hell they want with you!"
Well no, cause Valve continue to own the game, as you say, the licence is what he tried to steal and its entirely upto Valve what they do with it. You'll find that companies _have_ a right to take back a licence to something you bought that they own. All we, the end users have, is the right to use the licence, but the owner reserves the right to take that from us if a dispute arises. We're paying for the privildge to use it, at no time do we actually own any of it.GetCool said:Someone explain me this:
If you walk into a store and steal an item and are caught, the store owner has the right to press charges. You would then be prosecuted, you'd do your time, pay your fines, whatever. That's perfectly understandable.
Say, then, that after you are all cleaned up, you go back into the store and attempt to purchase the same item you tried to steal. The store owner may say, "Hey, you tried to steal from me a year ago. You aren't allowed in here anymore!" and kick you out. He has that right. But could he let you buy the item, and then take the item back and keep your money? No. He can only tell you you can't buy the item before you buy it.
With software, this seems like a totally different ballgame. The concept of the "license" introduced by the EULA seems to make the above analogy obsolete. Valve is simply exercising its right to terminate the license agreement at its own discretion.
Now, how is this not an ethical question? Sure, the original poster screwed himself with his actions, and if Valve decides he can no longer use any Valve products, so be it, they have the right to deny him that. But isn't this, in its own obscure way, abuse via the EULA? He should at least be entitled to his purchase amount back, before being banned from Valve products.
If you paid attention, you'd realize that my point lies in my very use of the analogy. My point was that physical property and software licenses are not the same thing by virtue of the EULA.Pi Mu Rho said:Can we stop with the analogies please? They don't work. It's not the same as buying a piece of physical property, or the same as buying from a store.
Actually, what you purchase is a license for HL2, not an account. Your Steam account is the mechanism by which Valve may give/take software licenses.What you have bought from Valve is an account. The games that you purchased are tied to that account. If you try to steal from Valve, then they disable the account that you used. Simple, really.
Of course they did, and of course it was.Valve haven't decided that cabe can no longer use Valve products. They decided that the account that was used in an attempt to steal their products should no longer be active. That cabe chose to register a valid key with that account prior to it's closure is his fault, and his problem.
...within the scope of computer software EULAs. It is of my opinion that software EULAs are fundamentally unethical, but such is an argument that runs beyond the realm of this forum. I drew the analogy because I wanted to point out that the very idea of what is/is not ethical changes when you talk about computer software.What Valve did was entirely correct, and entirely ethical.
You're entirely correct. I do not dispute the legality.The Dark Elf said:Well no, cause Valve continue to own the game, as you say, the licence is what he tried to steal and its entirely upto Valve what they do with it. You'll find that companies _have_ a right to take back a licence to something you bought that they own. All we, the end users have, is the right to use the licence, but the owner reserves the right to take that from us if a dispute arises. We're paying for the privildge to use it, at no time do we actually own any of it.
GetCool said:...within the scope of computer software EULAs. It is of my opinion that software EULAs are fundamentally unethical, but such is an argument that runs beyond the realm of this forum. I drew the analogy because I wanted to point out that the very idea of what is/is not ethical changes when you talk about computer software.
Please, don't patronise.GetCool said:If you paid attention, you'd realize that my point lies in my very use of the analogy. My point was that physical property and software licenses are not the same thing by virtue of the EULA.
For the purposes of this discussion, it's the same thing. Stop being pedantic.Actually, what you purchase is a license, not an account.
No, Valve have not prevented him from using their products. If he signs up a new account and uses a new legit CD key, he can play happily all day, forever.Of course they did, and of course it was.
...within the scope of computer software EULAs. It is of my opinion that software EULAs are fundamentally unethical, but such is an argument that runs beyond the realm of this forum. I drew the analogy because I wanted to point out that the very idea of what is/is not ethical changes when you talk about computer software.
But I do "agree with the terms." That doesn't necessarily mean I agree with the ethics of those terms. I have not and will not break the terms; I have agreed to follow them, not agreed to believe in them.The Dark Elf said:If you don't agree with the EULA, your not supposed to use the software, by using it you are saying in the eyes of the law that you read, understood and agree to abide by the terms laid out.
There really isn't a way around it. Valve _are_ in the right.