Software companies are ABOVE the law according to them. They can pretty much make ANY kind of law and force you to accept it.
Think about it.
When you buy a car, do you have to sign a paper from Ford saying you can only do this with the car, and can't do that with the car, and can't let anyoen borrow it, etc. etc.
When you buy a TV from RCA, do they give you a big long sheet saying you have this and this rights?
When you buy a microwave, does it come with tons of "license agreement notes" that if you do something wrong, they can come after you?
ONLY in the software world, can they pretty much do whatever they please. Force you to upgrade later, force you to only keep certain copes, force you to buy the whole package if the cd gets even one scratch, since they force you to NOT make a backup cd, force you to be stuck with the product if it doesn't work on your computer, force you to pay $50 to get support since their free support is setup for a nice 9 hour wait, and email support is non-existent.
Software (micrsoft hack hack) is one of the lousiest, most untrusty, unreliable products in America. If we made cars like we make software -- we'd have accidents all over the fucking place. No wonder the Japanese told us to keep the software market, they'll have the hardware market thank you.
-= nav =-