Linked by Nescio on Mon 9th Mar 2009 08:05 UTC
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Member since:
2005-07-06
Uh oh? That's only a problem if the EULA is actually enforcable. Modifying something and reselling it is not a copyright violation, as long as it's not a copy that you're reselling. Same way I can buy a book, change some text and then sell it to someone else. I can, of course, not pretend that the changes I made are in the original or that I'm the original author but that's a different story.
For simplicities sake I'm ignoring DMCA since it has no effect in most of the world. "
So lets get it straight.
1. You have no idea what is actually written on the boxes of Apple's software.
2. You have an extremely poor grasp of copyright law (fyi, modifying a book and then selling it is copyright infringement, regardless of whether you pretend the changes are in the original or not).
3. You have decided to ignore a major law in the jurisdiction in which the lawsuit in question is happening because it completely destroys your arguments.
So the only real question is, why is someone with such a poor grasp of the facts of the case and the relevant laws in question spending so much time commenting on it?