GameRager: 1. Just like me and some of my faults, I guess. Do you find it more a blessing or a curse, if I may ask?
2. Read above for actual dev/lawyer aide comments about how lengthy and complex it can be & how having differing EULAs for every game for every port for a company is a logistics nightmare.
3. I agree...it's just they do research into these things and have experience....i'd rather let them do the rsearch and i'll look into it first before basing my decisions...rather than just worry over something needlessly beforehand.
4. Yes but if all they were doing is throwing a copypasta EULA on the games and not any drm & that means we can have their games isn't that a good thing for everyone involved?
It's definitely both, blessing and curse. You normally don't get any praise for it, but I am also not unhappy about it. I just need to stop myself from time to time.
You're probably right that the matter is more complex than just a few clicks. But the right to collect usage data as much as they want is bad under any circumstances. There should be something like: We will ask you everytime we collect something and will only do so with your explicit consent which is purely optional. That would be nice.
This would make the EA games even better coming here to GOG for anyone involved. It's kind of tolerable as it is, but it can be better. Or to make it short from a general point of view that certainly does not apply here: If we give in to everything we will end with nothing. That's why customer protection is always a good thing.
I don't want to overstress it here, because this matter isn't that important after all, but I don't believe that we get this EULA because EA just cannot manage to make a special EULA or make the general EULA better but because they also don't want and think that we are buying anyway. They are probably right.