7,500 Sell Their Soul Online

BBBut, if you don’t believe, you were supposed to decline. And you got money for that.

Ah. I missed that. Fair enough, maybe it does prove his point.

Naw. I was trying to be silly. If you don’t believe in a soul, and you really want the software, why would you decline? It’s not like they actually get anything.

Heck, I’m a Christian, but I know that an EULA cannot enforce a religious contract.

Are you SURE? That seems like one of those things that you don’t want to find out the hard way.

I guess I shouldn’t link **kanicbird **to this thread then? :smiley:

Don’t have anything to add on the topic, but I wanna say I really like the illustration that accompanied this article.

This does rather highlight the point that no-one actually reads the T+Cs of their digital products (I used to do so pretty thoroughly but now I just don’t bother as they’re all the same). I do make a point of reading the fine print of products that I’m not familiar with though, and I’m glad I do as in doing so I realised that one product I was going to sign up for was effectively a scam. But for computer games? Nah - read to many of them to know they’re all pretty much the same.

Given any random group of 7500 people, I bet there will be at least one nutjob who goes completely over the top full-retard crazy, saying that their soul was damaged or stolen and not returned or some such bullshit. Of course, unlikely that we’ll hear about it unless they do something wildly and publicly crazy about it.

But it would be amusing to be the person who reads the company mail for a few days.

Maybe Cat was just singing the refrain…