korniatm: Pretend it is 2005:
I swear to god, I don't think you actually understand how companies operate or what kind of deal EA and Bioware have. You seem to think "EA DOES BAD THINGS THEREFORE RANDOM BAD THINGS WILL HAPPEN" without actually bothering to consider
how and
why these things actually occurred in the past.
I'm not dismissing your claims because I like EA. I'm dismissing your claims because they're based out of completely irrational fears rather than having any actual basis in business reality. They're a company with bad business practices, not a bogeyman with a Bioware-shaped voodoo doll.
See my point?
Yes. Your point is that you still don't understand how contracts work, or that company mergers have
absolutely nothing to do with sales agreements.
First, EA had nothing to do with Bioware in 2005. That was a separate series of mergers. EA bought THAT company in 2007, two years later.
Once again, you know that you're scared something will happen, but you have absolutely no idea of what happened last time, or how it could possibly happen this time. GOG has not merged with anyone and their parent company is not up for sale.
How are the two situations related at all? You've yet to say how this would occur outside of EA RUINED BIOWARE. It's like refusing to buy a Sony CD player because of the recent PSN security debacle. Yes, that was a terrible thing, but
CD players don't gather any personal information so the concern makes no sense. Likewise, yes EA did bad things with Bioware, but
their deal with GOG is a distribution deal and gives them absolutely no ownership, or partnership, with GOG or their parent company so your concern makes no sense.
And just as an addendum, Bioware wasn't exactly untouchable before EA got to them. Dragon Age II may be awful, but so were Jade Empire and the original Neverwinter Nights campaign.