The most delectably obvious question is 'Does anyone recognise any of the players from the list posted above?' 
http://fusenn.com/ncusers.php

http://fusenn.com/ncusers.php
eracer2006 said:no however altering game code or making programs that alter the game code is.
eracer2006 said:no however altering game code or making programs that alter the game code is.
Looking at EULAs sends us back to Doom. Back in 1993 Id Software had not provided a user
license with Doom and therefore could not govern the distribution of early mods. Only later, Id’s
business manager posted an agreement for prospective Doom modders. This statement included
a request that the mods should work only with the registered version of Doom. (Kushner 2003,
168-169) Reading through the EULA of almost any contemporary game reveals that this humble
wish has in ten years time changed into a standard requirement in game industry. For example
Quake III Arena user license includes the following lines
ID grants to you the non-exclusive and limited right to create for the Software
(except any Software code) your own modifications (the “New Creations”) which
shall operate only with the Software (but not any demo, test or other version of
the Software).
Other interesting part of the Q3 EULA is defining the appropriate circulation of “new creations”.
You shall not rent, sell, lease, lend, offer on a pay-per-play basis or otherwise
commercially exploit or commercially distribute the New Creations. You are only
permitted to distribute, without any cost or charge, the New Creations to other
end-users so long as such distribution is not infringing against any third party right
and is not otherwise illegal or unlawful
Being against the EULA does not make something illegal, and does not affect anybodies legal rights.Weebull said:The EULA basically exists as a company's terms of service. As in, they will permit you to use a product as long as you follow their rules. That doesn't mean it has any legal standing though. Being drunk isn't against the law, but that doesn't mean a bartender will serve you if you are.
As it's name implies, little more than a personal agreement between two parties. Breaking an agreement isn't illegal, neither is breaking the EULA (assuming you're not breaking any actual laws by doing so), and the company whose EULA is broken will probably have a very hard time taking you to a civil court over it (depending entirely upon what you've done).eracer2006 said:what do you think End User License Agreement actually means ?
theDave said:surely thats entrapment?
deadkomodo said:ps are there any good hack free games out there (or am I just being naive).![]()
deadkomodo said:ps are there any good hack free games out there (or am I just being naive).![]()
deadkomodo said:I loved FEAR combat online but the hacks recently (about a month back) are soooo lameevery1 in the server dies through unarmed attack at the same time, after a week of my games getting ruined I have not played again since
ps are there any good hack free games out there (or am I just being naive).![]()