Monday, 04 February 2013 14:03

German consumers against Valve

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The German Alliance of Organizations for the Protection of Consumers think that the terms in the license agreements on Steam that Valve offers to their users, which prohibits the resale of their games to other people, are illegal. According to the prosecutor, the users who are fairly paid for the game should be free to do with it whatever they want, including the resale of their copies, or rights to the game, to whomever they want.

“Steam users own the games they purchase and should be able to resell them when they want to, just like owners of traditional card or board games can. But while those traditional game owners can resell their games whenever they like, Steam users often cannot” said Carola Elbrecht, the VZVB's project manager for consumer rights in the digital world.

This is the second attempt by the association to deny Valve’s licensing rules at the court. The first time they tried to bring down the provisions of the contract was in 2010, when a German federal court ruled in favor of the defendant.

However, the European Court of Justice ruled in July last year that the trade of "used" software is completely legal and that the authors of the software do not have the rights to appeal on resale. While the case before the Court is somewhat different than the case VZVB brings to court, the association hopes that these two cases will have enough similarities for them to prevail.  Since this is coming from Germany, we can expect EU to potentially ban this rule of disallowing resale of bought games via Steam.

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Read 3185 times Last modified on Monday, 04 February 2013 21:19

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