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SageTV Software Discussion related to the SageTV application produced by SageTV. Questions, issues, problems, suggestions, etc. relating to the SageTV software application should be posted here. (Check the descriptions of the other forums; all hardware related questions go in the Hardware Support forum, etc. And, post in the customizations forum instead if any customizations are active.) |
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#21
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#22
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Seems to me that the prevailing legal interpretation of executable code as a copyrighted work is fundamentally misguided. The human-readable source code might legitimately be so construed, but users don't buy the source; they buy the executable.
It's like the difference between plans for a house and the actual house. The architect can legitimately copyright the plans and control who gets to build houses from those plans. They don't get to control what happens to the house after it's built. That said, if I rent a house rather than buying it, the landlord has the right to prohibit me from subletting It and to write that prohibition into the terms of my lease. And it seems to me that's the situation we're in with respect to software EULAs: we're basically renting it rather than buying it outright, and the landlord has written a "no sublets" clause into our lease. Now I realize that courts have not agreed with this interpretation, but it wouldn't be the first time courts have got things wrong.
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-- Greg |
#23
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It ultimately comes down to a legal arrangement between the seller and the buyer. The terms of that sale, in this case, is the 'rental' example Greg mentioned above. This differs greatly from the Autodesk scenario, where the software is 'keyed' with an actual hardware 'dongle' (much in the way the HD200 and HD300 are physical keys). In this case, the actual dongle is the holder of the license, and as such, can be resold in concert with the first sale doctrine.
Ultimately, though, there are very little to any 'rules' regarding aggrements between two parties, and the Sage EULA is such an agreement. Both parties have aggreed to the words as written, and there are no written laws in the US that will nullify any part of that agreement. There is also no-one who will actively enforce violations of said agreement.
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#24
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This seemed like a fair assessment of the current state of EULAs: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/End-user_license_agreement
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