this post was submitted on 24 Dec 2024
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I hope you're paid well to spread this easily disproven lie.
https://support.gog.com/hc/en-us/articles/212632089-GOG-User-Agreement?product=gog
This is just the license to download the game installer, not to install it.
Once you've downloaded the software they can't revoke the license for that installer file.
Yes they can. They cannot stop you from installing the game, but once they revoke your license, it would be piracy.
GOG shills always twist reality to try to make it conform to the "you own you games" lie, but the truth is GOG is no different than Steam.
How do you use a Steam game after its license was revoked?
By default Steam is a mere download manager without any DRM. You can zip the game folder and back it up anywhere. Whether or not publishers go through the additional steps to enable one or more DRM solution is a different matter. My favorite Steam games have no DRM at all.
Same as GOG: piracy.
You're purposely ignoring the obvious differences between GOG and steam to fit what you believe. Have fun with that
The differences are practical, not legal. He is right in the end
Practical difference is all that matters in most instances. If a law cannot be enforced, it is irrelevant.
They can't, actually, because they don't hold the rights to that content, only to GOG and the installer. Once it's installed their distribution and license rights end.
If the game you install has its own license from the rights holder that gets revoked then you'll be in breach of that license, if anything.
How do you disprove that this "GOG content" are offline installer files that, as long as you keep them backed up, work indefinitely even if GOG revokes your license to download them again?
I don't. However, using those files after GOG revokes your license would be piracy.
the reality of the situation is that these 2 things look exactly the same in 99% of circumstance and 100% of circumstances that consumers actually care about