Ethics really doesn't play into this, and in what little way it does, the morality of it is different depending on which side of the fence you sit on. For the most part, it's economics; as producers, the publishers try to separate their customers from as much money as they can for as little product as they can. As consumers, we try to separate the producers from as much product as we can for as little money as we can. Why is it that so many people on this site immediately jump to the defense of their economic opponents?Normandyfoxtrot said:As you probably know now ethic and law often have little if anything to actually do with eachother. As for my support of rental, ultimately it comes to how the system is limited in it's nature.Owyn_Merrilin said:That's even worse. You have no problem with rental, which let's you pay someone $5-$10 bucks to have the game out for a weekend, and potentially beat it in that time, but you don't want people to buy used? The dev isn't getting any money from you either way. And don't bring up that old story about how rental places have to pay more. Blockbuster did it back in the 80's, but that was just to appease the film companies, who were really leery of the whole home video thing. There was never any legal reason for them to do so; the right of first sale states that whoever first buys a product can do whatever the heck they like with it. This includes selling it on or renting it out. That's right, the used market is not simply legal because there's no law against it; there's actually a federal law on the books which expressly protects it.Normandyfoxtrot said:I have no issue with games rental, and a library is simply a literary form of public rental.Owyn_Merrilin said:Wait a second, you use libraries, and you're judging me for buying used games? Hypocrisy, thy name is Normandyfoxtrot.Normandyfoxtrot said:Frankly I don't buy used books I purchase new or use public library facilitiesOwyn_Merrilin said:What are your feelings on used books?Normandyfoxtrot said:The 10 dollar project doesn't stop you from picking up a game six months from now a stream or online or a at a big box etc..etc...etc... only the asinine used games racket.RyanKaufman said:Maybe if games were actually good I'd buy things new. Until then, I haven't bought a new game since Mass Effect 2, and I won't buy a new game until Skyrim. EA games tend to blend together also. I'd rather just play Combat Arms and actually keep playing with a large amount of people for longer than 6 months. I guarantee you can't say that for 95% of all multiplayer games on Xbox Live.
Edit; If anything, that law is on the books to prevent unethical business practices from taking hold. While law!=ethics, not all laws are unethical.