Quote:
Originally Posted by BeefJerky
This is wrong on so many levels. Simply put, you do not own the software, you only buy a license for it. As such, you are subject to the terms of the license agreement (or EULA). If the license says that you cannot install it on 3rd party hardware, than you cannot. As an analogy, a software license is akin to having a drivers license. You can get one, but you are subject to very specific terms and conditions regarding what you can do with it. You are limited in what rights you have, and can also also get the license revoked. The reality is that this is a very cut-and-dry case, and no court of law will take Psystar's side in this.
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We'll see how this all plays out. While it's true that you are bound to a EULA, it's also true that a EULA has to meet certain criteria in order to be valid.
Remember- Microsoft got smacked down by just about every government in the free world for doing something similar to this with Windows back in the day. Their's was slightly different (they said they didn't want Windows running on hardware that also ran Linux) but it's the same basic principle: once you buy the software you are free to do whatever you want (within reason) with it.
In short- just because it's in a EULA doesn't mean the consumer is bound to that EULA. That EULA still has to follow the laws. Microsoft found this out the hard way, and I'm positive Apple will too if Psystar has enough money to fight them.