Rights are valuable to have and protect, even if you have no immediate intention of exercising them. For example, I find the right to run for U.S. president (when I meet the age qualification) valuable, even though I don't intend on ever running for president. If someone tried to take away my right to run for president, I would oppose this, not because I expect on running for president, but because of the loss of the inherent value of having the right. Similarly, there is lost value in losing the right to reinstall software N times, even if you never expect on reinstalling the software N times.Foil wrote:Edit: For those of you who vehemently oppose this "3X" style of protection, I'd like to know why:
A. I expect to need to install it four times before I can play it.
B. I expect to reinstall it four times for some other reason.
C. I should be able to install it whenever, wherever, for whomever, and as many times as I choose. (I.e. companies should not be able to control usage.)
D. Game companies are big/evil corporations. (I.e. it's okay to copy/pirate/hack their product.)
If I oppose this DRM in this software, I am under no obligation to demonstrate that I "expect to reinstall it four times." (Nor do I have to think that I "should be able to install it whenever, wherever, for whomever"...) There is a very simple reason to oppose it. It takes away a right that has inherent value.
No one thinks that companies don't have the right to use over-restrictive DRM. But sometimes we have the right to do things that we shouldn't do. The argument here is that although the company has the right to bury their software in DRM, they still shouldn't.Foil wrote:Software companies have the right to protect themselves from illegitimate use...