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Originally Posted by MacPwnsWin that's exactly what I said, just a lot more verbiage. |
Is it? Allow me to quote you:
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Originally Posted by MacPwnsWin You still bought their software, you should be able to use it how you want |
Again. No, you did
not buy their software. You bought a
license to use the software. You own
no part of the software.
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Originally Posted by MacPwnsWin There is no law written saying that it is illegal to install mac on a non-apple computer, but there is a contract, and a breach of that contract has legal repercussions. |
Contract law is well-established in common and statutory law. The former is not "written law" in the form of codified law, however the precedents
are set by and in court cases which
are written down. Statutes are, of course written law. Breach of contract can, and does, run afoul of both common law and statutory law. I'm afraid you are quite mistaken on this point. There is "written law" that covers this quite well on federal and state levels.
You are also forgetting other areas of the law that this sort of thing touches upon. Copyright, intellectual property, even possibly tort law could be implicated. And there are likely others that I'm not thinking of at this late hour.
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Originally Posted by MacPwnsWin What I was saying is that, in my own mind, I own the software and can do what ever I want with it. Like I said; I, myself, do not care to follow that law or any law I disagree with. |
I understand precisely what you were saying. And I disagree with it wholeheartedly.
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Originally Posted by MacPwnsWin I said that I did not know what the repercussions as listed in the contract were. I know it's a legally binding contract and the court would require me to uphold my end. I'm not stupid. And Apple is never going to sue any home user for installing mac on windows. It is not worth it to them financially. And they're not going to know. How would they know? Unless you sent them the error reports with the hardware profile when an application crashes, they're not going to know. Even then, the chances of them recognizing that it wasn't an apple-built PC are so slim, you have a better chance of winning a 7-digit lottery. |
I, myself, said the odds were against Apple taking any action. But it is a risk, nonetheless.
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Originally Posted by MacPwnsWin So, please don't try to be condescending. It is very rude. Read posts fully and completely before you try to tear them apart to make yourself feel smart. You could be an adult, and look for a conflict and politely correct it. Or maybe you could elaborate (politely) on my short little post for those not-so-bright people who would not understand or misinterpret what I was saying. |
There was nothing condescending in my reply. I refuted your position with fact, as I am doing again. I am sorry your feelings were hurt, but your position is not a tenable one.