Author: Robin Smith
Date: 17:31:20 09/08/03
Go up one level in this thread
On September 08, 2003 at 20:02:13, Mike Byrne wrote: >On September 08, 2003 at 19:46:47, Robin Smith wrote: > >>On September 08, 2003 at 19:29:22, Mike Byrne wrote: >> >>>On September 08, 2003 at 18:49:03, Robin Smith wrote: >>> >>>>On September 07, 2003 at 18:08:14, Mike Byrne wrote: >>>> >>>>>My definition is quite simple. If the software violates the licenisng >>>>>agreement, it is illegal. I have read the UBI Soft licensing agreement and like >>>>>most agreements, distrubuting licensed modified code to others (registered or >>>>>not registered ) users is prohibited. That is exactly what deadking is, it is >>>> >>>>NO!! Deadking does NOT distribute ANY UBI Soft code. It is a program, seperately >>>>written, that modifies UBI Soft code. If you don't have theking.exe, which is >>>>NOT included with deadking, then deadking will not work. It was designed by its >>>>programmer only for legal owners of CM9K. Although I am not a lawyer, I don't >>>>believe there is anything illegal about deadking. >>>> >>>>Robin >>> >>>The UBI Soft License Agreement (page after 67, this page is not numbered): >>> >>>• You may not modify, translate, reverse engineer, decompile, or disassemble the >>>Software, except to the extent that this restriction is expressly prohibited by >>>applicable law. >>> >>>I think that is pretty clear cut. >> >>Yes, it says that. They can write anything they want in a license agreement. >>That does not make what they write legally binding. Such restrictions on >>modifying something you alrady own do not stand up in court. > >Yes you are correct, Until proven in court that restriction is not valid, I am >simply taking the stance that deadking links and discussion are non grata in >this forum based on the chart that we all agreed to. OK, I can live with that.
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