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EA Sued Over Spore DRM
Posted by Regeneration on September 25th, 2008, 11:56 AM

Electronic Arts may have attempted to appease angry customers by amending its digital-rights management policy on Spore, but the company's DRM troubles aren't over yet. Earlier this week, a class action suit was filed in the Northern District of California Court on behalf of Melissa Thomas and all other Spore purchasers.

The suit contends that EA violated the California Consumer Legal Remedies Act and Unfair Competition Law by failing to inform consumers that by installing Spore, they also inadvertently install a program called SecuROM. SecuROM is a copy protection program that limits the number of times software can be installed on a PC. In the case of Spore, that limit was set to three (and later upped to five).

"Although consumers are told the game uses access control and copy protection technology, consumers are not told that this technology is actually an entirely separate, stand-alone program which will download, install, and operate on their computer," read the complaint (PDF). "Once installed, it becomes a permanent part of the consumer's software portfolio. Even if the consumer uninstalls Spore, and entirely deletes it from their computer, SecuROM remains a fixture on their computer unless and until the consumer completely wipes their hard drive through reformatting or replacement of the drive."

You can read the entire article at CNET News.

Last edited by Regeneration; September 25th, 2008 at 12:00 PM.

10 Comments
A removal tool for SecuRom DOES exist, a format is not required.
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Replacement of drive?... Replacement of the drive?! What kind of incompetent douchebag would replace a drive just to get rid of SecuROM.
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lol i do agree what they claim is just a wee bit inane, but still, power to them
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Anyone remembers the rootkit-case of Sony's copy protection and earlier - StarForce ?
It's time for they to get rid of it completely, it only backfires at their legal users,
pirates always find a way over it and crack/remove their protections.
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like i always said, there never has been and never will be a DRM that some 16 year old kid wont crack the very next day, it a waste of time and its inflating the price of the games, get rid of it, reduce prices which will make actually buying games more appealing and achievable.

But, alas, major corps are run by lab monkeys that only seel dollar signs and not common sense or logic
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DRM is a waste of money. If they sell their products at a resonable price they would not have half the problems they do today. Will it end pirating. Of course not. But it would at least save them the headache of wasting money on something that A. Pisses people off and B. Will be cracked in a day by a 10 year old kid. LOL
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Unixlord, its starfuck that kills drives, Securom just causes system instability.
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Death to DRM !
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What pisses me off is that I recently bought Mass Effect, which has the same shitty copy protection. So now I'm not buying ANY software published by EA!
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