Longstreet said:
Genocidicles said:
There are always DRM removal cracks. No multiplayer, but then you wouldn't have been able to do that when they turn the servers off anyway.
Not exactly legal, but where do they get off saying what you can or cannot do with your own property?
Perfectly legal actually, if you own the game you can do with it what you want. This includes a no-dvd / no drm crack. (This is also the reason why the statistics of pirated games are always bullshit)
Removing DRM in general is pretty easy. Look at SimCity. You had to delete TWO lines of code to prevent the online check in.
With the Xbone they were also able to just remove the DRM after all that backlash.
From what i understand from OP's question you are asking if there should be an option / patch to remove DRM from games? Yes it should. Especially when they are gonna stop supporting the game (look at darkspore)
While it is legal to do what you want with your own property, the source codes aren't yours. It is illegal to open, look or modify the source code, which is what hacking does.
It doesn't matter if you're viewing compiled code (ASM,binary) or not (c# c++ java) it's all considered the source codes.
The difference is when you hack your own computer's memory, at that point, it becomes legal.
That is why RAM hacking is legal but ASM hacking is not.
Digital Law: Copyright of Computer Programs [http://digital-law-online.info/lpdi1.0/treatise19.html]
The link above contains historic cases as examples.
Although do not be confused by the next page about RAM copies, it's about copying a program from the RAMs, which is not the same as modifying values produced by that program in your RAM.
Longstreet said:
My guess with steam is, that SHOULD they shut down (which will probably never happen, the last few years they doubled their revenue) You can still use the offline mode to play your games. Multiplayer wouldn't be available, but that's something that can happen to any game when there are just no more servers.
While I am as optimistic as you are about steam lasting a long time, the offline mode is very misleading.
You are required to be logged on to be in offline mode, in other words, it's only useful if for some reason you lost your connection while being online.
To try it for yourself, simply log off steam, disable your internet and try to play any steam games.
It doesn't work because to play your games offline, you first have to login, then click "Offline Mode".
On the other hand, Valve did claimed that if they were to shut down, for any reason, they would remove the steam's DRM from every games, allowing you to play them without steam.
So in any case, you can only lose your games from breaching the STEAM® SUBSCRIBER AGREEMENT [http://store.steampowered.com/subscriber_agreement/] as this guy [http://arstechnica.com/gaming/2011/03/steam-user-violates-subscriber-agreement-loses-1800-in-games/] found out!