G(ordon)-man
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Spore is the best example of a DRM gone wrong.
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I'm sure there are people out there with no internet, actually I know there are because I know quite a few of them. Poor college kids don't like to spend money on the internet yet might still like to play half life 2 which can be bought for $4.99, they are SOL.How many people out there play games on a semi-modern to modern computer and don't have even the most rudimentary access to the internet?
In bioshock's case I believe that DRM was removed after numerous complaints. But you are trying to argue that 2 wrongs make it right, they don't. And in the case of steam you do have to be constantly connected to the internet from what I understand. Sure they have offline mode but from what I understand once a new steam update comes out you have to download that update before the game will work (if I am wrong on this please correct me). In none of those cases (again correct me if Im wrong, I never played these games) you do not have to register an account online and give up any kind of personal information.It is not like it is unheard of for games to require an internet connection as part of publishers DRM strategies. Spore, Bioshock and Mass Effect all required an internet connection to complete installation for example and some required a consistent internet connection for "re-authentication". And yeah there was a mass backlash against it. When was the last mass backlash against Steam? Must have been 5 years ago I reckon when, by all accounts I've heard, Steam was buggy and slow.
Valve have already addressed this concern. There is an update sitting on their hard drives that permanently disables Steam's need to contact their servers. Thus if the worst comes to worst Valve's last act would be to allow Steam to run independently from Valve.
I work in the hardware industry, to me value added is something additional and optional a company adds. But this is a silly thing to argue about, I think you make a valid point.Your definitions are incorrect.
That just means that it isn't an optional value added feature.
Indeed they are, but that doesn't change the fact that they are a minority.I'm sure there are people out there with no internet, actually I know there are because I know quite a few of them. Poor college kids don't like to spend money on the internet yet might still like to play half life 2 which can be bought for $4.99, they are SOL.
You still need an Internet connection to finish installing.In bioshock's case I believe that DRM was removed after numerous complaints.
I'm trying to argue that for better or worse DRM is the norm and that DRM needing the Internet isn't uncommon and that in light of that Steam's benefits balances (some might say surpasses) it's limitations.But you are trying to argue that 2 wrongs make it right, they don't.
You are wrong, once in offline mode Steam doesn't connect to Valve at all and so is unaware of any updates made since entering offline mode.And in the case of steam you do have to be constantly connected to the internet from what I understand. Sure they have offline mode but from what I understand once a new steam update comes out you have to download that update before the game will work (if I am wrong on this please correct me).
What "personal information" does Steam make you give up?In none of those cases (again correct me if Im wrong, I never played these games) you do not have to register an account online and give up any kind of personal information.
In my experience Terms of Service are there to tell you what you can't do not what they promise to do. But I feel that is moot point for a number of reasons.Really? Then why don't they change their terms and back up what they promised legally?
I originally looked for one to check my wording, but I couldn't find it.Do you have a source for this claim?
I'm still living in the Pentium 4 era and Steam isn't causing me any trouble.Nice straw man argument. No, if EA releases their games on a bloated piece of shit for minimal benefit to the consumer, then that wouldn't be OK. However, this isn't the case for Steam, it offers very large benefits and could only be described as bloated if you're living in the Pentium 4 era.
Steam is useless offline.
You just CAN'T play Valve games without internet connection.
That means, for people without good and cheap internet, Valve games are crap.
That is the price of Steam. And this is where retail copies and piracy get a HUGE advantage.