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tiledjinn

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tiledjinn
·11 miesięcy temu·discuss
texas has its own so that it doesn't need to meet the regulations of the others
tiledjinn
·w zeszłym roku·discuss
Either the one little Timmy wanted, or the one the clerk tells her is selling fast (whether or not it's selling fast).
tiledjinn
·w zeszłym roku·discuss
Ok; package up Cloudflare, Facebook, or E-Trade and let people host it.
tiledjinn
·w zeszłym roku·discuss
> - Put an expiration date on the storefront and make it clear that your software is not guaranteed to continue working after date X.

This software is not guaranteed beyond 0 Unix time.

> - Have your server source code (stripped down of proprietary stuff) ready for public release at EoL.

This isn't viable, and i would expect anyone on this site to understand that. it's roughly equivalent to saying "just make facebook stripped of proprietary code and ready for the public to run"

> - Allow customers to reverse engineer the binaries and communication protocol after EoL.

This is a reasonable path forward, but likely a non-starter in the US for political reasons. I understand that "stop killing games" is an EU thing.

> - Package dedicated server binaries with the game and allow customers to connect to it via a LAN or direct IP option.

See point 2. This is nonsensical.
tiledjinn
·w zeszłym roku·discuss
i wouldn't use it if you paid me
tiledjinn
·w zeszłym roku·discuss
Juris Doctor. A lawyer.
tiledjinn
·2 lata temu·discuss
More fair to say Epic is money pitting from, given discoveries from Epic v Apple and Epic v Google..
tiledjinn
·2 lata temu·discuss
Epic v Apple the court decided not to answer the question of whether Apple is a monopoly.
tiledjinn
·2 lata temu·discuss
Better to say Apple failed to lose. The court explicitly left open the question as to whether they are a monopoly. They just didn't provide any meaningful injunctions as a result of that case.
tiledjinn
·2 lata temu·discuss
Which case is that? Because that's not how the Apple ruling went.
tiledjinn
·2 lata temu·discuss
Apple wasn't ruled not a monopoly. It was ruled that Epic failed to bring convincing evidence and arguments.

So yes, Apple could be subject to similar restrictions in the future. Either through another monopoly case, or [imo more likely] regulation.
tiledjinn
·2 lata temu·discuss
Apple wasn't ruled not a monopoly. It was ruled that the evidence Epic brought in the case was insufficient to show Apple was a monopoly, and the court would entertain other arguments in the future.

Apple didn't need to do anything, but they didn't "win" that convincingly.
tiledjinn
·2 lata temu·discuss
access to money. don't even need to use it.