The EULA agreement for almost every piece of software developed contains that language.
Also the language that states you lease the content. All you own is a disc (if you bought a disc).
US Circuit Court of Appeals has held that the language in both of those instances is legal and binding. None of the cases have made the Supreme Court, so as it stands everyone developer puts this in to mitigate/eliminate basically all liability from any claims against them.
English
-
Edited by RemittingFire28: 12/15/2014 10:12:55 AMSupreme court only hears cases that have to do with constitutional discrepancies. They can decide if something is constitutional or not and the lower courts handle everything else. So unless a case comes up that claims EULA's are unconstitutional they would never think of hearing the case. Besides that fact the USA isn't the only country these games are played so who gives a -blam!- what a US court has to say, big picture concept I know. These 2 things together tell me you know nothing of what you speak, so stfu.
-
Forget your Xanax this morning?