The "Section E" is not anymore defined in the current version of the EULA

linvanchenelinvanchene Posts: 1,386
edited February 2015 in The Commons

Because of all those threads about the EULA I started to go trough it step by step.

I got stuck at this specfiic part:

Other Restrictions. This Agreement is User’s proof of license to exercise the rights granted herein and may be printed and retained by User. User shall not give, sell, rent, lease, sublicense, or otherwise transfer or distribute any Content on a temporary or permanent basis without the prior written consent of DAZ. User may not reverse engineer, de-compile, disassemble, or create derivative works from the Content except as set forth in Section E above.

Source: http://www.daz3d.com/eula

In the current version of the EULA the capital letters in front of each paragraph are missing.

In the current version of the EULA it is not possible to tell what exactly "Section E" is.

I checked with an EULA version of 2013 and there under 1.0 General License Agreement Section E were the paragraphs under TERMS of USE.


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Is this a known issue and DAZ legal staff is allready aware of it?

or

Should I open up a new support ticket about this?

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I am aware that for discussing legal issues a 3d forum may not be the optimal place.
Forum moderators cannot be expected to have the time and energy to read trough lenghty posts with legal terms that may make their head spin.

Nevertheless I also do not want to waste the time of the DAZ support staff with questions that could have simply be clarfied by someone on the forum.

Post edited by linvanchene on

Comments

  • Richard HaseltineRichard Haseltine Posts: 109,141
    edited December 1969

    This is the first reference to the issue that I've seen, I will pass it on.

  • linvanchenelinvanchene Posts: 1,386
    edited December 1969

    This is the first reference to the issue that I've seen, I will pass it on.

    In this case thank you for forwarding it! :-)

  • wizwiz Posts: 1,100
    edited December 1969

    Just one of about six things I can see on a quick read that render the EULA unenforceable.

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