• Re: It's not your hardware anymore...

    From Werner P.@21:1/5 to All on Tue May 13 19:57:06 2025
    Am 12.05.25 um 20:28 schrieb Spalls Hurgenson:

    Well, Nintendo has taken the next step.

    You know how we none of us really own our software anymore? We're just privileged to 'license' it, and -for the most part- can only play our video-games should the publisher continue to allow it? That if they
    pull the servers, all of a sudden we can't download, authenticate or
    run the game anymore, leaving the gamer with little recourse?
    Glad my kids have grown out of Nintendo.. no sales from my family anymore.
    Nintendo always had amazing games but always was a shitty company not as
    in EA shitty, but awful enough!

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Dimensional Traveler@21:1/5 to Spalls Hurgenson on Wed May 14 17:30:49 2025
    On 5/14/2025 7:33 AM, Spalls Hurgenson wrote:
    On Tue, 13 May 2025 19:57:06 +0200, "Werner P." <werpu@gmx.at> wrote:

    Am 12.05.25 um 20:28 schrieb Spalls Hurgenson:

    Well, Nintendo has taken the next step.

    You know how we none of us really own our software anymore? We're just
    privileged to 'license' it, and -for the most part- can only play our
    video-games should the publisher continue to allow it? That if they
    pull the servers, all of a sudden we can't download, authenticate or
    run the game anymore, leaving the gamer with little recourse?
    Glad my kids have grown out of Nintendo.. no sales from my family anymore. >> Nintendo always had amazing games but always was a shitty company not as
    in EA shitty, but awful enough!

    Its unlikely Nintendo would ever follow through with the threatened
    step, especially since, as most --all?-- Switch 2 games are delivered digitally. Just killing the associated account would effectively
    render the device useless without damaging the device itself (probably through e-fuses, although maybe an updated ROM that tells the machine
    "don't work no more!"). Certainly their EULA (for US residents only)
    gives them permission to do so, for pretty much any reason

    (specifically, "as we otherwise determine to be reasonably
    necessary for legal, technical or commercial reasons")

    Still, it's not really Nintendo that I'm worried about as much as
    their setting precedent for other companies to do similar. This sort
    of forced obselence is something a lot of device makers would LOVE to
    do, and Nintendo has just opened the door on how to do it. Soon these features will be built into pretty much all our gadgets, and once it's common, it won't be too long before companies pull the trigger.

    Or an authoritarian government makes them pull the trigger.

    --
    I've done good in this world. Now I'm tired and just want to be a cranky
    dirty old man.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From candycanearter07@21:1/5 to Werner P. on Thu May 15 20:00:07 2025
    Werner P. <werpu@gmx.at> wrote at 17:57 this Tuesday (GMT):
    Am 12.05.25 um 20:28 schrieb Spalls Hurgenson:

    Well, Nintendo has taken the next step.

    You know how we none of us really own our software anymore? We're just
    privileged to 'license' it, and -for the most part- can only play our
    video-games should the publisher continue to allow it? That if they
    pull the servers, all of a sudden we can't download, authenticate or
    run the game anymore, leaving the gamer with little recourse?
    Glad my kids have grown out of Nintendo.. no sales from my family anymore.

    Nintendo always had amazing games but always was a shitty company not as
    in EA shitty, but awful enough!


    As someone once said, "Nintendo is a lucrative law office, with a side
    buisness in making video games"
    --
    user <candycane> is generated from /dev/urandom

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)