Legendary Half-Life YouTuber plans class-action lawsuit against Ubisoft for killing The Crew
Legendary Half-Life YouTuber plans class-action lawsuit against Ubisoft for killing The Crew

Legendary Half-Life YouTuber plans class-action lawsuit against Ubisoft for killing The Crew

Goddam right, that's not a grey area IMO, that shit ought to be illegal. Maybe there should be a term, like let's say 90 years maybe?
My personal favorite is the "companies are obligated to support it forever, or open source the server software hosted by a third party, hosting paid for up front for at least a year."
They get to keep my money forever don't they?
While I love the spirit of this idea, it gets complicated fast. Worlds adrift is a great example. The gameâs server was created using some closed source libraries with a paid license. So when the owning company (Bossa Studios?) went under, they were unable to open source it.
A law like this would effectively kill all licensed software that isnât a full product. I do agree though; we need a solution
I'd tie its length to copyright length. Maybe they would fight Disney when they try to raise it again.
I just expect a popup in the game which says something like "Could not connect to server, some multiplayer features will be unavailable. Continue offline?"
Or the ability to host community servers like the olden days when a game is sunsetted.
Or, maybe donât force online requirement, and allow p2p. Or, better yet, open source the server now that itâs shut down and release a patch to specify where to connect.
Blacklight Retribution did this for their console version. Wish they woulda did it for the PC version but whatever.
Imagine buying a T-shirt, and the manufacturer, without your prior knowledge or consent, could somehow render your shirt unwearable -- that's effectively what's happening here. The only "gray area" might be that ultimately you don't own a copy of the game anyway (since digital copies are effectively leased -- a whole other issue unto itself), but regardless: more power to this lawsuit. Seriously shady shit getting tacitly accepted lately.
"we lost our license to print this brands logo on our shirts, so you have to give it back now"
Smh
"Imagine everyone moves to electric vehicles, gas stations close down, and people start sueing Ford for releasing a gas car 30 years ago" is the better analogy.