I'm familiar with that, but I'm not sure that's the same thing; I bought a (new) copy of Dragon Age a few weeks ago, and it had a one-time-use code insert that allowed me to download a $15 add-on for free. But if I had bought that one used, I still would have had the option of paying the extra $15 and getting the add-on that way. Bioware's approach encourages people to buy the new one instead of the used one, yes, but it does it in a way that doesn't punish people who buy it used by actually preventing them from accessing a feature.
Like I said earlier, I understand to policy; GameFly alone would potentially account for thousands of unsold copies of the game if export licenses weren't pretty tightly-controlled (well, maybe not "unsold," as not everyone who rents a game is someone who would have bought it otherwise, but at least there would be a lot of people who'd be getting a lot of product for far less than intended). Not to mention traditional rentals, RedBox, and people taking advantage of the very same GameStop return policy I did. I'm not really complaining; I only brought this up because I wanted to verify that it worked the way it does. It was a pain for me to deal with, but it's been dealt with; at this point, it's a non-issue for me.
Well, looking again, I'm seeing quotation marks around the word "perspective," presumably to indicate a dismissive attitude toward my use of the term, the implication that I intended to rip anyone off, and the word "pretends."
You're... welcome?
I'm not sure it was "the right thing," though... would keeping my used copy and just dealing with not being able to export the songs have somehow been "the wrong thing?" It's a used copy of the game, not a stolen one. My whole point when I brought up perspective was that there really isn't a "good guy" and a "bad guy" here, just different views of an issue. Nobody's the villain.
I don't know if you guys know this, but if I were to buy a used Prius, Toyota wouldn't see a dime from me. They'd have already been paid for their product the first time it was sold. After that, the new owner is free to do with it whatever they want, including selling it to someone else. Nothing shady or dishonest or conspiratorial; just people doing business with other people.












