> For publishers to understand why restricting rights of their customers is bad for them, they need to understand this. Steam, and other systems like it are the future.
Steam does restrict customer rights (can't resell games for instance). The truly important thing is that the rights your DRM scheme restricts should not be rights the user cares for or wants to use.
At the end of the day, experience is king, and Steam's great because the experience is better than piracy's.
I know you aren't arguing against Steam. I just wanted to expand/respond to a part of your comment.
Steam does require giving up certain rights you'd have if you had purchased the game from a store, true. However, it also provides you rights you wouldn't otherwise have. For example, I can reinstall games without having to worry about finding that CD/CD Key. If I lose the game DVD, I can't play it anymore. With Steam, I now have that right.
Steam might take away rights, but in doing so, it rewards me with other rights that are if not equally as valuable, are more valuable then the rights they are removing.
> However, it also provides you rights you wouldn't otherwise have. For example, I can reinstall games without having to worry about finding that CD/CD Key.
That's not really a right, that's mostly convenience.
> If I lose the game DVD, I can't play it anymore.
> That's not really a right, that's mostly convenience.
Call it what you will, it's very valuable. Of course, if I have a right to play the game because I bought it, and lose the CD key, I've now technically lost that right.
> Depends on the game.
I'm sorry, but the majority of games you can't. Yes, their are exceptions. Should I preface everything I said with a paragraph of legalese explaining that their are exceptions.
> unless you lose your Steam password that is.
That's not correct. You have to lose your steam password and choose not to recover it, which is much easier then if you lose your CD Keys.
Steam does restrict customer rights (can't resell games for instance). The truly important thing is that the rights your DRM scheme restricts should not be rights the user cares for or wants to use.
At the end of the day, experience is king, and Steam's great because the experience is better than piracy's.