you nolonger own the game you buy, you are blizzard can discontinue your license for any reason they want without notice to you. among other things. you need to read. i'm done with blizzard for good now.
Uhm, that's not new - that's literally in EVERY blizzard game iirc.
And Blizzard isnt the only company to do that, other companies with MMOs say the same thing.
It's just for security reasons and chances are that you'll get banned for nothing are pretty slim, if you do you can just contact them if you did nothing wrong...
The only EULA I've ever read was Flickr as I don't want to give away the rights of my pictures (like on Facebook).
About D3... I just saw the capslock part in the beginning about shutting the AH down and accepted & closed immediately.
@hwwgandolf: That what you're saying was already in the release version of the D3 EULA. Seems like you haven't read it the first time ;-) In fact, it's a legal blurb to be found in most EULAs these days if you buy something as part of a digital content distribution system like B.Net, Origin, or Steam - they even technically need to have this part in their agreement as the service is not usable once the platform is offline (cf. B.Net/Origin/Steam outages). And it's their protection against cheaters (they can ban the license).
You're a wizard Harry.....
And Blizzard isnt the only company to do that, other companies with MMOs say the same thing.
It's just for security reasons and chances are that you'll get banned for nothing are pretty slim, if you do you can just contact them if you did nothing wrong...
The only EULA I've ever read was Flickr as I don't want to give away the rights of my pictures (like on Facebook).
About D3... I just saw the capslock part in the beginning about shutting the AH down and accepted & closed immediately.
@hwwgandolf: That what you're saying was already in the release version of the D3 EULA. Seems like you haven't read it the first time ;-) In fact, it's a legal blurb to be found in most EULAs these days if you buy something as part of a digital content distribution system like B.Net, Origin, or Steam - they even technically need to have this part in their agreement as the service is not usable once the platform is offline (cf. B.Net/Origin/Steam outages). And it's their protection against cheaters (they can ban the license).
Ha. Bagstone.