dmoy a day ago

I like the idea of reclaiming the word "buy" to only be the traditional type of ownership transfer (first sale doctrine or whatever if it's a copyrighted thing). Mandate the use of the word "license" or "rent" if it's something else

  • ravenstine a day ago

    Exactly. Conflating buying with renting indefinitely, without resale ability, is a deliberate way of confusing people for profit. My younger, more naive self, might have been surprised at just how long society has allowed this to slide.

  • astrostl 6 hours ago

    I feel like a related motion could have a transformative effect on how individuals approach and societies react to "ownership" of financed things (e.g., cars and homes).

  • callc a day ago

    Is there a better word for this sort of transaction (non-resellable, arbitrary cancellation of service at some unknown point in time by some entities)?

    “License” seems too legal, and implies either a lifetime license or fixed term license, which is different than a “we’ll shut down game servers whenever we feel like it”

    “Rent” already has a different meaning that is commonly understood.

    Is there any suitable existing word? Maybe the awkward phrase “revocable at any time license”?

    • diggan a day ago

      "Lease" perhaps?

      > lease - a contract renting land, buildings, etc., to another; a contract or instrument conveying property to another for a specified period or for a period determinable at the will of either lessor or lessee in consideration of rent or other compensation.

      • LexGray 7 hours ago

        I think lease actually applies as the fixed period of supported ownership is until they take the servers down or they drop support which could happen before you even unwrap.

        I think they should also remove “buy“ from any software requiring external servers.

      • marcellus23 a day ago

        Lease is pretty similar to rent in my mind — you're getting a product for either a fixed period or for as long as you keep making regular payments, neither of which applies here.

        • njbooher a day ago

          I don't think there'd be consumer confusion if they sold it as an 80 year lease for $60. Maybe backlash.

        • jolmg a day ago

          > you're getting a product for either a fixed period [...] neither of which applies here.

          Typically, as a practical matter, the license ends with your death. You can't pass your kindle ebooks and steam games as inheritance like you can with physical books and game discs.

          • User23 a day ago

            It will be interesting to see this challenged in court, because it's a clear violation of the first sale doctrine.

            In any event you are within both your moral and legal rights, in the USA at least, to backup any software you have purchased and you should do so if you care about it.

            And nobody is going to be able to stop you from leaving those backups to your kids.

            It is interesting though how the software business has managed to, via the courts, meme software licenses into existence. The simple fact is that under written US law no license is required to run software you have acquired a lawful copy of. The law explicitly gives you the right to make additional copies as necessary to execute the program. Case law of course is another matter. And lawfare is another matter on top of that. Who wants to spend the rest of their life being sued by Adobe because they want to sell a copy of photoshop they no longer use?

        • diggan a day ago

          Leases come in all different shapes, forms and conditions. To replace what the companies misleadingly call "Buy" today, they terms would just be "Pay X up front and get access until we cannot provide the service anymore for X,Y,Z reasons".

          In many places, ground/land is leased that way, where you pay a sum up-front and are allowed full ownership for 99 years or something like that.

    • kaishin 21 hours ago

      Apple uses “Get”.

      • AStonesThrow 12 hours ago

        I would also endorse glittering animated buttons labeled "I CAN HAZ ?"

    • mway a day ago

      Maybe a "conditional allowance" (noting that the conditions may be vague, and likely vary among products/companies) would be more in line with what's happening?

      Doesn't really roll off the tongue though.

    • peddling-brink a day ago

      Revocable license, temporary use, indefinite borrow?

      There’s no good word because it’s not a reasonable position.

    • scotty79 a day ago

      I think they'd just switch from Buy to Pay. For what? For whatever ... so you can play now.

  • jauntywundrkind a day ago

    Mark Lemley's Terms of Use paper (2006) outlines how property law/right (rights of us citizens) have been eroded steadily by contract law (what other people say they can do to us). It's so sad for technology to be so very strongly affiliated with such a critical defilement of the human spirit as this. https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=917926

    It's so sad that there have been so very few legal efforts to bolster property rights, to reassert some sovereign claim over the things we have about us & that fill our homes. In fact, the opposite keeps happening: anti-circumvention laws spread like the plague they are, making any attempt to exercise one's property right a felony offense.

    This is murdering the human spirit. Man the toolmaker's god-granted rare ability to understand the world about us, to model & learn, and then to adapt & alter is trapped in an infernal legal hell. What's happening is against my spiritual beliefs & is so terrible to suffer, is such high tragedy.

  • drewcoo a day ago

    > I like the idea of reclaiming the word "buy"

    Yes. Now let's do "steal."

  • lotsofpulp a day ago

    Keep it simple and just use the word rent. No need to complicate it.

    “Rent until we choose to not allow you to access it for a one time payment of $x”.

    • packetlost a day ago

      Idk, I think "rent" and "license" have different meanings. Modern definitions of "rent" include periodicity into the definition, which is at odds with the "one time until we shut off the servers" definition. I agree with the GP on the terminology for these reasons.

      • lotsofpulp a day ago

        The whole point is to highlight, for the lay consumer, the periodicity of their purchase, regardless of the periodicity of payments. And hopefully create market pressure for sellers to sell things rather than rent them.

        • packetlost a day ago

          Fair, I can get behind that reasoning

      • scottmf a day ago

        I “rented” a movie on Apple TV last night. I’m quite confident I won’t be paying again in 30 days :)

        • ianburrell a day ago

          That is good reason to not use "rent" because it is already used in industry for short fixed-term rental.

          • lotsofpulp a day ago

            The button should say rent: 1 day or 7 days or “until we choose to no longer give you access”.

    • falcolas a day ago

      I'm afraid that the connotations around rent (namely monthly payments) would only encourage the worst publishers to only go further.

      • ronsor a day ago

        No one is renting a game for $70/month.

        • Foobar8568 a day ago

          Not sure of the cost of MMORPG, but at one stage they were like $12-$14, and Everquest even had a server that was lived for a couple of years, legend, where it was like $40/month, a bit pay-to-win server...I mean with a better CS support.

          • NikkiA a day ago

            > but at one stage they were like $12-$14

            they (the ones that are subscription) still are.

            And most of them have micro-transactions on top of that as well. Some will give you a (very) limited number of micro-transaction currency-units per month.

        • warkdarrior a day ago

          Not yet!

          • rvnx a day ago

            Absolutely! Markets evolve, see, for example, nobody was willing to pay on things like Siri, and now millions of folks are spending 25 USD/month on Siri+.

            EDIT: sorry, just came from the future.

      • lotsofpulp a day ago

        Sellers are smarter than that, they already go as far as they think buyers will let them. It is the buyers who need elucidation.

        • diggan a day ago

          If you solution involves getting the general population to do something or "be better" somehow, it's not a practical solution.

smeej a day ago

It makes me wonder about the meta question about how to stop whatever the next iteration of this will be.

Like, if we look back at this, surely there were people saying, "Hey, things have changed. You don't actually 'own' the thing you think you're buying anymore. This could come back to bite you," but on the whole, not nearly enough people cared for it to shape the market.

There is sure to be another thing like this, some other movement where yet another owner of something finds a way to sell you access to it in a way that makes you think it's "yours," but actually all you have is permission to use it as long as they remain happy with you and happy to continue allowing you access. How do we make sure people know and care next time?

And what about the fact that, on the whole, most people are apparently fine with having access to things rather than ownership of them? How do you make the distinction when it matters, but allow both types of transactions? (For example, I'm glad I don't have to buy, and then sell, even a single room in a house to stay in when I'm traveling; paying to use it for a limited period is preferable to me in that situation.)

We know putting the information in the terms of use won't help, but what would?

  • 63stack a day ago

    >It makes me wonder about the meta question about how to stop whatever the next iteration of this will be

    My take: general computing will be gone.

    There will be no way to run arbitrary code on any device.

    You can see the screws already tightening at several places. Phones have various methods like safety net that is meant to "protect you", apps can now detect if they were sideloaded, bootloaders are locked.

    DRMs are running with kernel level privileges, Microsoft requiring TPM on new releases of windows. There is pretty much one browser left (Chrome), so google can do whatever they want with the web. I'm sure they are already drafting out the next "web attestation" API, except this time they will do it in the dark instead of in the open.

    DNS over https means that you can no longer block devices from phoning home on your own network.

    There is a handful of companies controlling about 90% of the internet if not more.

    • philistine 9 hours ago

      I understand and sympathize with your point of view, but a general bars open policy with a kernel is not a necessity for general computing. Let's focus on the idea that you don't have to vet your code by the maker of the device, not that your tentacular code needs to access every single memory address.

  • foobarchu a day ago

    People have indeed been warning about this for years, particularly in spaces like Steam where you don't even have a physical item to pretend you own. For a long time the response has mostly been "yeah right why would they revoke the licenses?".

    This just happens to have been kicked off by one of the first high profile cases of exactly that happening with games (that I know of). It also happened a lot this year and last with movies and TV shows that were allegedly "bought" on platforms like PlayStation and Crunchyroll but were actually licensed by the rights holders.

    • Our_Benefactors 19 hours ago

      In my experience Steam is actually extremely good in this area. I have games in my steam library which haven’t been sold on the steam store in years, and I can still download from the steam servers and play without any issues or friction. Some of them are EA and Ubisoft titles that were pulled so those publishers could sell exclusively on their store launchers.

  • Dagonfly 10 hours ago

    To me the the final dystopian level is data ownership.

    It's already annoying to use your iPhone as a primary camera without paying for iCloud storage. Imagine if you could only view your own photos after you've paid $10/mo for the cloud service, and there would be no reasonable way to get your data out.

  • wizzwizz4 a day ago

    > And what about the fact that, on the whole, most people are apparently fine with having access to things rather than ownership of them? How do you make the distinction when it matters, but allow both types of transactions?

    We could engorge the commons. If people are okay with mere access, then (for easy-to-distribute things, like books and videogames) free culture should naturally outcompete comparable proprietary works.

    Promote DRM-free cultural artefacts. If you'd drop $70 on a AAA title, drop $70 on a DRM-free game you like, and then tell your friends about it. (Try-before-you-buy is a feature, not a bug, though don't be stingy about this if you can afford not to.)

    This isn't generally-applicable, of course, but deconstructing the "everything is property" schema might make it easier to get another angle on it.

    • smeej a day ago

      "Intellectual property" almost seems like a contradiction in terms. Like, I can't arrange the bits on my own computer hardware in a specific order because someone else arranged the bits on their own, separate computer in that order first? What?

      Or better yet, ideas. I can't think things in my own brain, arguably the thing that is most obviously mine, and then talk about what I think about those things, because someone else thought them first and I didn't come up with them on my own? I get why it's not cool to pretend I did come up with them. It's cooler if I can remember where I heard them first and give credit for them. But if I don't remember? If I connect two ideas I heard about ten years apart only once I hear the second one and I can't remember where the first one came from? How did that idea not become "also mine" after being stored and then recalled from my own brain for ten years?

      I don't know how to solve the admittedly hard problem of allowing people to profit from the hard work it takes to come up with original ideas. But the "intellectual property" concept doesn't make a lick of sense to me as the way to do it.

WCSTombs a day ago

This is the bill itself, which is pretty short and understandable: https://leginfo.legislature.ca.gov/faces/billTextClient.xhtm...

I think it's pretty sensible. For any digital good (including books and movies etc., not just games), if you're supposedly buying the thing, it can't be given to you in a form in which your ownership can be unilaterally revoked later.

  • jolmg 16 hours ago

    > (4) This section does not apply to any of the following:

    > (C) Any digital good that is advertised or offered to a person that the seller cannot revoke access to after the transaction, which includes making the digital good available at the time of purchase for permanent offline download to an external storage source to be used without a connection to the internet.

    I can imagine e.g. Amazon arguing that kindle books can be downloaded to kindle devices and phones, and so they apply to this exemption. However, the downloads are only usable through their software, so they technically maintain their ability to revoke access because of that.

    Wonder if they'll keep their "Buy now" button on kindle books product pages.

  • paxys a day ago

    Plus you should be able to sell it to someone else.

tantalor a day ago

Are they going to require refunds when the license is revoked?

  • Alupis a day ago

    That's not how any license agreement works.

    ie. Your money is not collateral. You are paying for a license to use the software (game) for a period of time.

    • Beretta_Vexee a day ago

      The disagreement concerns the licence's period of validity. If I lease a car, I know how long I can use it. When I buy a licence to use a game, the publisher can revoke the licence the day after I buy it, and the contract is drawn up in such a way that nothing obliges them to compensate me. The situation would be much healthier if the publisher announced a ‘5-year user license, including server maintenance and security patches’. It's like all those ‘lifetime’ licences that only cover one major edition of a software and give you a royal 20% discount on the licence for the next version. It's a deceptive practice.

      • Alupis a day ago

        > When I buy a licence to use a game, the publisher can revoke the licence the day after I buy it, and the contract is drawn up in such a way that nothing obliges them to compensate me.

        On Steam (from Valve) you would be entitled to a full refund in that scenario.

        Valve offers full refunds for any game you have played for less than two hours and owned for less than two weeks. In some other situations, they have also applied refunds outside that policy where the game turned out to be a fraud or something.

        There are also many titles in people's Steam libraries that are no longer offered on Steam, but you can still download and play if you purchased it prior to it being pulled from Steam.

        • terinjokes a day ago

          Valve probably has enough leverage to hold it off for a while, but rightholders seem to be trying to close that loophole. A store I previously bought FLACs from emailed me this week that a new Terms of Service comes into force on October 1 where the change is the service can remove downloads when the rightholder removes the music from sale and requests downloads to be removed as well. A few hours later I got a notification that a number of albums in purchase history will be removed from my available downloads on October 1st.

          • diebeforei485 20 hours ago

            The FLAC's are presumably DRM free and are yours to keep once downloaded. Storage (cloud or local backup) is your problem.

            Not having re-downloads is a separate issue.

            What company is this?

        • Beretta_Vexee a day ago

          What if I've played for more than two hours and I'd like to finish the game? What if Valve changes its refund policy? What if the publisher forces me to go through another online shop (EPIC game)?

          Valve is certainly a consumer-friendly company, but that's not the whole story and it doesn't change the fact that they're hiding vital information from consumers.

        • WalterSear a day ago

          Valve doesn't refund you if the company shuts down their game servers, afaik.

    • harshreality a day ago

      There has to be some implied period of time for which it's fully usable.

      No sane court is going to uphold an adhesion contract where someone pays $100 for a substantially multiplayer game (e.g. not Portal 1) yet the publisher is allowed to disable servers required for the game's multiplayer operation a week later because they cost money to maintain and the userbase hasn't hit targets.

    • peeters a day ago

      If you are required to fully prepay, instead of pay a recurring fee, then the license term should be fixed to eternity, meaning a refund is in order if the license is ever revoked. Otherwise, it should have to be phrased as a recurring payment ($XX for first 2 years, $YY/year after that). This model that you pay fully up front but for an undefined term length is odious and should be illegal.

    • lukeschlather a day ago

      I mean, that would be fine if specified except it's a perpetual license that can be revoked at any time. Whether it's one hour or 10 years I'm not sure how it is good-faith to sell such a license without explicitly specifying the license duration and terms. Of course in practice, it is more like "perpetual provided that the entity you are licensing from elects to re-license from the rights-holder every X years" but I really don't see how such an arrangement should even be legal. You shouldn't be allowed to sell those kinds of licenses where the duration is dependent on third-party negotiations that have nothing to do with the initial license sale.

      • Alupis a day ago

        It's an odd world where we willingly trade dozens or hundreds of dollars for a couple hours of entertainment (golf, amusement parks, movies, dinner out, bars, vacation) but we're unwilling to trade similar amount of money for software (games) that give you many, many more hours of entertainment.

        There's people who have spent literal days entertained by a game, but then complain they had to spend $70 for the privilege. Where else can you be entertained for a couple bucks an hour or less?

        In my opinion, if you license a game and play it for a dozen hours... you've gotten your money's worth already. That said, I too would be disappointed if a game I enjoyed was removed from my library.

        • lukeschlather a day ago

          The point isn't whether or not it's a good deal. If I agree to license a game for 12 hours in exchange for $70, great. Like you say, I make deals like that sometimes. But that's not what we're talking about here, the licensor is misrepresenting it as a perpetual license and that should just be considered fraud.

        • TheCoelacanth a day ago

          Restaurants don't tell me that I'm buying a table in the restaurant; they tell me I'm getting a meal. Movie theaters don't tell me I'm buying a seat in the theater; they tell me I'm seeing a movie.

          Paying to play a game for some time is fine, but they shouldn't lie about what terms you're getting.

        • dfxm12 a day ago

          I think there are more factors at play in this situation.

          This is a case where even if you wanted to pay money to continue or start playing a game, you can't because someone else simply doesn't want you to.

          This is a consumer-hostile shift from earlier days where if you owned the disk, disc or cartridge and a computer that could play it, you could play the game, no questions asked. I think it's always worth fighting against consumer hostile shifts.

          Some people are collectors as much as they are gamers. A license (or whatever) is less valuable to a collector than a game.

          • Alupis a day ago

            > A license (or whatever) is less valuable to a collector than a game.

            To be frank - nobody cares about collectors. That argument will not change how software is licensed one bit...

            • dfxm12 a day ago

              I was not making that argument. ¯\_(ツ)_/¯

        • poincaredisk 12 hours ago

          >Where else can you be entertained for a couple bucks an hour or less?

          Some examples include:

          *Mountain hiking

          *Swimming in a lake

          *Reading a book

          *Arguing on HackerNews

    • eldaisfish a day ago

      What about physical game disks? I own the disk and can play the game as long as I have the disk. I can also resell or share the disk. Sony once demonstrated this on stage during the PS4 launch.

      Digital licenses take away all of this and add the possibility that your licence can disappear at any time.

      • WalterSear a day ago

        > I own the disk and can play the game as long as I have the disk.

        Depends whether the game is 'online-only' or not.

      • sickofparadox a day ago

        Physical game disks have maybe one console generation left. Nintendo might keep cartridges around for two tops. The future is basically all digital. When doing his Mea Culpa rounds about Xbox losing the console wars, Phil Spencer talked about how being second in the generation where gamers built up digital libraries was likely too much to overcome.[1] Most game sales already happen digitally[2], and the number continues to rise.

        [1] https://www.trueachievements.com/n53706/phil-spencer-intervi.... [2] https://academyofanimatedart.com/gaming-statistics/#:~:text=....

      • Simulacra a day ago

        That's very different. In America at least, if you purchase a physical object, you own it. You can do whatever you want with it. It's called the first sale doctrine.

        • foobarchu a day ago

          That doesn't hold with games, and that's exactly what this law is addressing. Many (if not most by now, I haven't bought many games recently) physical games are now just an unplayable kernel and you have to download the actual game. If you sell the physical good you are selling a piece of plastic. Quite a few don't even contain a cart or disc in the box, it's just a download code.

          Now, yes, you can say "but first sale still holds, you aren't prohibited from selling the object you bought", but most rational people are going to call that nonsense.

stewx a day ago

Willing to bet that the retailers will opt to change the button label rather than change business practices.

  • KMnO4 a day ago

    I actually don’t even see the word “buy” currently. I see “add to cart” and “checkout”.

    That said, I doubt it has any real impact on sales. It’s like “Beef chili” vs “Chili with beef”. The average consumer wouldn’t know the difference.

    • drdaeman a day ago

      > It’s like “Beef chili” vs “Chili with beef”. The average consumer wouldn’t know the difference.

      Idk, but where I lived before, at some point virtually everyone knew the difference between e.g. "cheese" and "cheese[-like] product", because it quite mattered - one is real cheese made with real milk, another is typically a plant-based substitute with quite different properties (and typically of much worse quality).

      Average consumers aren't exactly dumb (at least, not at the individual level) when things actually matter to them. They're just uninformed and don't actively express the desire to learn (so they remain uninformed), so they can act not in their best interest because they aren't aware about something. But when we know, when the information gap closes - we act differently, and that's not going back. Education is important.

      So it may impact licensing of digital media where user intent was specifically focused on indefinite access. E.g. movie or music sales when people had incorrectly assumed that "buying" means they can rewatch/relisten it whenever they like, no matter what (and then their "purchased" content disappears because licensing deal wasn't renewed or something).

    • jolmg 16 hours ago

      I see "Buy now" on Amazon kindle book product pages.

      Your point is true, though. It's not all that common to use those words. I thought at least the checkout page would, but I'm seeing "Place your order", which is pretty apt for both purchasing and licensing.

  • SG- a day ago

    Retailers will not be selling physical games for much longer tho. Walmart US has already started phasing them months ago.

    Game shops like EB are likely going to stop soon too I imagine which also conincides with all their gaming merch and toys thats taking up the majority of their store space these days.

    • DaiPlusPlus a day ago

      With limited exceptions, “physical games” for PCs today are just an alternative delivery mechanism vs. using one’s own Internet connection: you still end-up going through Steam, Epic’s store, or whatever - which means mandatory online activation - which means physical media is no guarantee of irrevocable use.

      Methinks we need something like a Criterion Collection but for games… which I suppose would be GOG.com - but if they carried triple-A games from day 1, instead of having to wait a decade first.

      • jolmg 16 hours ago

        Is that also the case with physical games for consoles? You can't take your disc and play at your friend's house anymore without reactivating and linking your account on their console?

        • Dagonfly 10 hours ago

          Generally, you can just give the disk to someone else. The physical disk contains the license key for the game.

          The issue is that all modern games need to be installed on the internal SSD. So you're not playing of the disk, you're just copying the files from it. And many games require a day-1 patch to work properly. Some even require a constant online connection.

          doesitplay.org is a useful database for that information.

NewJazz a day ago

Not just games. The law applies to any copyrightable work, afaict.

  • drdaeman a day ago

    So, cannot use "buy" for modern phones and cars either? ;-)

    • ang_cire a day ago

      Uh, there is not any car that the manufacturer can take away from you at-will, only in-car "services".

      • hedora a day ago

        Many cars have remote immobilizers and gazillion page license agreements that boil down to “we are liable for nothing, but you still agree to binding arbitration, and we can change the terms of this agreement at any time”.

        Also, some companies (like Tesla) designed the cars so they can control the resale process by remotely dropping it into various limp modes.

        • ang_cire 6 hours ago

          Note that nothing you listed contradicts what I said.

hedora a day ago

I wish they’d take the next obvious step, and say that if you get a license that lasts for more than N months without recurring payments, then the license is actually a sale.

teeray a day ago

I have faith that the marketing department can spin this. "Why just BUY a game when you can get A LICENSE TO GAME. Show you friends how much of a badass you are with ALL YOUR GAME LICENSES"

  • Workaccount2 a day ago

    "By purchasing the Terrasault Start Menu Launcher, you will be granted a FREE perpetual license to play Terrasault!"

    • layer8 a day ago

      Perpetual seems unlikely.

      • teeray a day ago

        *”Perpetual” may be terminated at any time without notice.

jbpnoy6fifty a day ago

I wonder if this trend will expand to other goods, like when you "purchase" a car.

You might be licensed to operate the vehicle but restricted in specific interactions with it.

It seems the industry is moving in this direction, which is concerning due to the cost structure. It shifts control away from consumers and toward the IP owners of these products.

Tesla may be a notable example, where you're unable to make modifications or repairs to the car without a proper license.

  • tshaddox a day ago

    What are you referring to with the car? Of course there are traffic laws. Similarly there are lots of physical objects you “buy” yet are restricted from using them to bludgeon someone.

    • WalterSear a day ago

      They are referring to no-resale and no-third party repair clauses, and the like.

Ferret7446 4 hours ago

Well, that's troublesome. Because you can't buy a game or any other digital good, due to copyright law. The concept does not exist.

I mean, I guess you could theoretically buy a physical medium that contains the data for a game, explicitly without a license to use the data in any way. But at the end of the day, you will always be licensing it, until the government abolishes the artificial enforced monopoly called copyright.

Manchit a day ago

In this case, licensing should be more affordable than the physical sale given its ownership cannot be transferred.

copperx 21 hours ago

I love the idea of reclaiming the meaning of "buy." However, after 70+ years of music recordings being "sold," we're all used to the concept of buying = licencing.

octacat a day ago

"Pay for a temporary access" instead of "buy". For people who do not like "rent".

bena a day ago

I don't think people really want "buy" either. Not deep down.

For instance, I bought Super Mario World for the Super Nintendo Entertainment System. That game is locked in. No fixes, no additions, no nothing. What is on the cart is what you get. Nintendo has no more obligation to me and I have no more obligation to them.

But people expect updates and changes. Let's not talk about "incomplete games being finished through updates", games get updated all the time now. Even for physical copies. Games now often install on the hardware and check for updates on first run.

So if we go to "buy", if you get a broken game, that's on you. Don't buy from them anymore. You don't get to hound the developers to "fix" the game. You paid for the thing, they gave you the thing. If you want a refund, return the thing.

I think we still haven't quite figured out how to work with ephemeral goods like software. It's kind of like a performance, kind of like a physical item, etc. It requires far more effort to generate than it does to copy. And buyers want to buy on the value of the copying, but sellers want to sell on the value of generation.

  • ronsor a day ago

    > So if we go to "buy", if you get a broken game, that's on you. Don't buy from them anymore. You don't get to hound the developers to "fix" the game. You paid for the thing, they gave you the thing. If you want a refund, return the thing.

    No, it's the developers' responsibility to release a finished product that works properly. The ability to simply do updates later has introduced a cancerous mindset to almost all areas of software development, where it is now suddenly OK to release an unfinished, buggy, or broken product and "fix" it later.

    > You don't get to hound the developers to "fix" the game.

    Generally people purchase products with the expectation of them not being defective.

  • 999900000999 a day ago

    When I buy a single player game I expect to be able to play it in 10 years or even 20. I should get DRM free binaries that run on Windows 11 or what not.

    If in 20 years I need to run an air gapped VM to play it, fine.

    What's not cool is if a single player game needs to phone home, and when it can't, my purchase is disabled.

  • falcolas a day ago

    I'm fine with the buy terminology. When I buy a car, I get fixes for manufacturing defects for free. Day 1 bugs are similar defects.

    • bena a day ago

      But if you go to a shitty concert, you don't get your money back.

      If you buy a shitty album, you can't get your money back. And you can't get the band to "make it better" for you.

      Is software a thing? A performance? A recording? It has elements of each. And despite people saying "we've solved this issue", we haven't. We keep slapping on different metaphors and complaining when that metaphor inevitably fails.

      That and no one really wants to pay the actual price for complete, error-free software. What they want is to get complete, error-free software for the price they've paid. Which is different.

      • jabbany a day ago

        > But if you go to a shitty concert, you don't get your money back. If you buy a shitty album, you can't get your money back. And you can't get the band to "make it better" for you.

        The difference is whether "shitty" is subjective or actually defective.

        Like, if you don't like the music, that's on you, someone else might like it.

        And, I've certainly been to concerts / movies / events where there have been "experience-breaking" technical difficulties and they've (partially or fully) refunded the tickets.

  • dfxm12 a day ago

    Hi, I'm a people. I want to buy games, deep down. I want to slap a cart into my console, press power and just have the game be ready to play. I don't want internet connectivity. I'll wait a year or two for the sequel if I enjoyed it enough. Maybe I'll trade it or sell it. Hell, if I really enjoyed it, I want to be able to hold onto it and play it like this well past its original production run.

  • SkyPuncher a day ago

    I personally have no interest in “buying” anymore, either.

    The games I care about are the ones that I can play with my friends, online. Nearly all of these have transitioned to driving revenue from other means than an upfront purchase.

    I’m arguably paying less now, than I did when I was younger. I used to have dozens of games that I played just a few times. $60 to sit on the shelf.

    Now, I “subscribe” to one or two flavors of the month. I pay perpetually, but my overall cost is lower since I’m only paying for what I actually use.

  • WalterSear a day ago

    > For instance, I bought Super Mario World for the Super Nintendo Entertainment System. That game is locked in.

    And can't be taken away from you by the sunsetting of game servers. And this isn't just a problem for multiplayer games.

  • Aloisius a day ago

    > So if we go to "buy", if you get a broken game, that's on you.

    What country doesn't have laws against selling broken goods?

    Even the US has an implied warranty of merchantability that requires a product work as promised.

  • LadyCailin a day ago

    I don’t see why you think this can’t work when the current system has only been in place for the last decade. The majority of things pre-2010 were all “fixed”. If anything, quality has only decreased since then, because companies know they can release the absolute bare minimum, and only have to invest as much as it takes to get the majority of buyers to stop having the energy to complain about it. If that were a fixed game instead, putting in that bare minimum would be a one time event, after which no one would buy from them again.

  • add-sub-mul-div a day ago

    Okay but "buy" back then also implied that a game had to work, or else the reputation of a developer would be destroyed permanently rather than temporarily until fixes came out. And, correspondingly, there was not a culture of selling broken console games like there is today.

  • jachee a day ago

    > But people expect updates and changes.

    This entitled attitude is part of the problem. A game can’t simply be shipped and done anymore. It means the quality can slip, because “we’ll patch it after we ship.” It also means the author has to continue development indefinitely, which means they’re also never done.

    • Workaccount2 a day ago

      Companies in the past making games that you would pay for once were somehow still making lots of money despite providing support for the game for a few years after launch.

      The cost of a few years of support is built into the price of the software.

    • gmokki a day ago

      People also buy cars and still expect major bugs in software and hardware to be fixed for free

  • simion314 a day ago

    >But people expect updates and changes. Let's not talk about "incomplete games being finished through updates", games get updated all the time now. Even for physical copies. Games now often install on the hardware and check for updates on first run.

    How so, I do not expect that a developer will add more content to a finished game for free. And AFAIK in the games I own the content updates are paid DLCs, I can only think at No Man sky as an exception that added more free content, in fact the thrend is to have like 50+ paid DLCs and milk the players for at least a decade.

  • OptionOfT a day ago

    Even when you license a game on say Steam the developers have no obligation to fix any problems.

    You get to self-refund a game on Steam within a certain timeframe, after that it's on you.

    Game breaking bug? Eh, they got their money.