Unit Design Lead
Disclaimer: Any views or opinions expressed here are those of the poster and do not necessarily represent the views or opinions of The Creative Assembly or SEGA.
I see that you have CA logo as your avatar -are you from CA?
You guys are not worried that Valve/Steam will have a detailed profile of every single ETW customer after ETW ships? Are they precluded from selling that information or using it to market their own products? What if Valve is acquired?
And are you guys concerned that having Steam always running in the background burning CPU cycles will negatively affect gameplay?
So I can have steam in offline mode....whew....had me worried there.
Yes.I see that you have CA logo as your avatar -are you from CA?
Over 15 million people use Steam for a huge variety of games. Personally in the 3 years I have been using Steam I have never received any form of marketing email from Valve, and I know of no one who has.You guys are not worried that Valve/Steam will have a detailed profile of every single ETW customer after ETW ships? Are they precluded from selling that information or using it to market their own products? What if Valve is acquired?
I have very rarely seen Steam using any cpu cycles, and I've been using it since 2006. As I said above, it uses about the same amount of system resources when running as MSN messenger.And are you guys concerned that having Steam always running in the background burning CPU cycles will negatively affect gameplay?
Unit Design Lead
Disclaimer: Any views or opinions expressed here are those of the poster and do not necessarily represent the views or opinions of The Creative Assembly or SEGA.
You know Jack.....may I call you jack.....we would all understand how steam works alot more.....if we had...........a demo![]()
If you keep asking for that demo someone at CA is going to give the order to have you 'disposed of'.
@ BeenPlayingSinceRTW
I have read the agreement,and I stand by what I said about it not being legally binding. End User License Agreements which are agreed to by clicking on a tickbox would be extremely hard to legally enforce. As far as I know no games company has ever actually attempted to prosecute someone for breaking an EULA, and would probably not succeed if they did.
It may suprise you, but companies say all kinds of things that they cannot legally enforce.
Have you ever seen a 'no refunds' sign in a shop? I have in the UK, despite the fact that this is illegal under fair trading laws. A car park which claims that you 'park here at your own risk' is wrong, if your car is damaged then they can be held responsible.
Recently EA games has found itself at the end of a class action lawsuit because it did something that it's EULA say's is fine. The lawyers on the side of the customers disagree however.
Even if Valve say they can install pieces of software without your consent, they cannot, and will not.
Last edited by Sir Beane; 01-26-2009 at 12:29.
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I LOVE DEMOS
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If you keep asking for that demo someone at CA is going to give the order to have you 'disposed of'.
I live in a far off land, CA has nothing on me :P, and we shall see who visits who if the demo dosn't come![]()
Hey guys.
I know that this is a topic that people like to discuss very passionately, but please, let's try to keep things civil. We don't want the lock crew* coming down on this thread.
Thanks for dropping in and shedding a bit of light on the subject Jack, we weren't sure if we would be able to play offline for a while there. I know it was at the forefront of many minds.
*Starring Martok and Nelson. This Fall on NBC
Obviously, you are entitled to your opinion, but I think that probably the tens of thousands of attorneys who draft EULAs for virtually every software company in the world (not to mention, the executives at those software companies) have a better understanding of the law than you do.
Here are the sections of the agreement ( http://store.steampowered.com/subscriber_agreement/ )that may be of interest:
This section of the Steam agreement gives Valve the right to automatically download any software they want onto your PC, once you've installed the Steam client:
This section of the Steam agreement gives Valve the right to use or resell data about ETW customers without CA or Sega's (or the end user's) approval:2. LICENSES
A. License Terms.
Steam and your Subscription(s) require the automatic download and installation of software and other content and updates onto your computer ("Steam Software"). You may not use Steam Software for any purpose other than the permitted access to Steam and your Subscriptions. You understand that for reasons that include, without limitation, system security, stability, and multiplayer interoperability, Steam may need to automatically update, pre-load, create new versions or otherwise enhance the Steam Software and accordingly, the system requirements to use the Steam Software may change over time. You understand that neither this Agreement nor the terms associated with a particular Subscription entitles you to future updates, new versions or other enhancements of the Steam Software associated with a particular Subscription although Valve may choose to provide such updates, etc. in its sole discretion.
7. USER GENERATED INFORMATION
"User Generated Information" means any information made available to other users through your use of multi-user features of Steam or to Valve through your use of the Steam Software. User Generated Information may include, but is not limited to, chat, forum posts, screen names, game selections, player performances, usage data, suggestions about Valve products or services, and error notifications. Subject to the Valve privacy policy referenced in Section 1 above, as applicable, you expressly grant Valve the complete and irrevocable right to use, reproduce, modify, create derivative works from, distribute, transmit, broadcast, and otherwise communicate, and publicly display and perform the User Generated Information and derivative works thereof in any form, anywhere, with or without attribution to you, and without any notice or compensation to you of any kind.
It seems this thread has permanently drifted off the original topic. And since the original question has long since been answered anyway....
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"MTW is not a game, it's a way of life." -- drone
As someone without connection, and having to put in a lot of blood sweat and tears to run the game I still broadly support Steam usage mainly on the basis of discussions I have seen on these forums regarding the alternatives and the communities broad preference for this over any other.
I think that DRM is probably a second strand to Steam's choice, as the software business model looks to be moving more to a portal based software provision (just look at google).
In answer to the legitimate concerns that people are raising about system resources, when I started gaming it was normal to run games from the DOS prompt, windows 3.1 was just another program. I resisted 95 when it launch because I resented the performance hit on my system, but as it became standard you have the choice, get it and play, or don't. Ultimately with its functionality in on-line support for patching and mods and a general trend for increased connectivity in the buying public, Steam and it's successors will probably become as ubiquitous. We are simply left with a the choice (in relation to the model), use it and play, or don't.
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