David Boles wrote:
Honestly. Just read one of the darn EULAs. Or have an attorney explain it
to you.
You have an extremely one-sided view. There is no reason to assume that
everything a EULA demands is legal. You may end up in an expensive
lawsuit if you break it, but it's a mix bag who will win. For example,
if someone sells you a product and demands that you can't resell it,
that demand is not legal:
http://www.theregister.co.uk/2001/11/28/us_court_ruling_nixes_software/
If they say you can't reverse engineer it, that's still up in the air:
http://cse.stanford.edu/class/cs201/projects-99-00/intellectual-property-law/reverse_engineering.htm
although the DCMA would apply to some software and change things in
countries that support it.
--
Les Mikesell
lesmikesell@xxxxxxxxx
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