Read more.Free up your DRM infested SecuROM titles with de-authorisation tool.
Read more.Free up your DRM infested SecuROM titles with de-authorisation tool.
Nice one. The deauth tool that came with Burnout Paradise already works well, so I expect this to be okay too.
april fools?
What, so this isn't an April fools?
EA have actually realised this only hurts the legitimate users, and provides interlectual challenges for a few crackers, one of whom is always bound to succeed, letting all the pirates have the benefits denied to those who paid for it......... Surely not!
throw new ArgumentException (String, String, Exception)
got to be an april fools. i dont believe it
so with this tool, it removes DRM from the above games mentioned meaning nomore onlin activations and nomore install limits?
still not good enough
steam does that already mate
I agree with j.o.s.h.1408 - still not good enough. EA remains on my personal blacklist.
Why? SecuROM for a start.
Secondly, included in the licence for the de-auth tool isSo ..... EA are so lacking in confidence, either of their tool or of it's effect on SecuROM that they feel it necessary to cover their butts to that extent? Well thanks, EA, not NO software that requires that kind of caveat is going on my PC if that's the risk of running to de-auth tool.3. System Interaction. The Software requires machine resources, including but not limited to memory and disk space, in order to perform and may have the capacity to impede the functionality of other software on your machine. The Software may slow and/or otherwise affect the performance of your machine and other software running thereon. You may experience technical issues, including but not limited to loss of use issues, after you download the Software. By installing/downloading this Software, you acknowledge and agree to bear the foregoing risks of use. IF YOU DO NOT AGREE TO BEAR THESE, DO NOT INSTALL AND/OR DOWNLOAD THE SOFTWARE.
Next, some of their games they stipulate that Vista UAC must be off to run the de-auth tools.
Also, they say the tool needs to modify three files, etc. Well, what about if you had a disk crash and can't access those files. Or merely had a Windows collapse and can't. Or simply forgot about having to de-auth several games before doing a system rebuild? It's not clear, to me at least, how they handle this.
As I've said before, I simply will not buy software that expects me to jump through this sort of hoop to meet their DRM requirements. They're entitled to do what they want to protect their business, but the price is that they lose long-term customers like me.
This is a step in the right direction, but a small one and nothing like far enough for me.
When I buy a game, I expect to be able to use it without this sort of mallarkey to contend with, and without putting up with SecuROM. So until such time as they back way off, if they ever do, on inconveniencing legit customers like me with their fight against the pirates, they and the pirates can slug it out between themselves without me, or my money, getting involved at all.
j.o.s.h.1408 (02-04-2009)
This has gone some way to restoring my dwindling faith in EA. The do publish some good games, but sadly with this crappy drm, thats why i've only played Crysis Warhead once. But mainly because most games i've played last couple of years seem so full of bugs and problems it makes me wonder how the hell they can rush out and not finish testing them first and make the game stable and better.
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I think this is just super lawyer disclaimer, just like they don't take any responsibilty for the game doing damage, they need something similar on any extra software that doesn't come with the game which people might download.Secondly, included in the licence for the de-auth tool is
.
So ..... EA are so lacking in confidence, either of their tool or of it's effect on SecuROM that they feel it necessary to cover their butts to that extent? Well thanks, EA, not NO software that requires that kind of caveat is going on my PC if that's the risk of running to de-auth tool.
That's not so good - the tool should require the same level of privaledges as game installation did.Next, some of their games they stipulate that Vista UAC must be off to run the de-auth tools.
You get at least 5 activations without deauthing to cover this. I've never had 5 consecutive hardware failures that I couldn't recover files from - if I did, spending another 10-20 quid on a good game would be the least of my worries. And that's assuming support don't give you extra activations, which I suspect they would.Also, they say the tool needs to modify three files, etc. Well, what about if you had a disk crash and can't access those files. Or merely had a Windows collapse and can't. Or simply forgot about having to de-auth several games before doing a system rebuild? It's not clear, to me at least, how they handle this.
That just raises all sorts of questions you shouldn't have to ask...
I thought it was bad enough that there are plenty of games out there built in such a way that you have to disable DEP for just to play them, although in the cases I've seen it's never been clear if it was DRM or the game itself that caused it.
I think I'll test this out on my copy of Spore, the only game on that list I own (haven't played it since the month of release...).
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