Which is illegal, since you didn't purchase the right to do so.
Actually this happened on my laptop. I used a legally purchased copy and when I had sent it into HP to get it repaired it would not recognize the registration code. I even called their number to see if that would work and that never did. I just decided to crack it instead.
George Gough
Which comes after I purchase the software. That is a service fee for updates and servers. If I am using neither, then I should be charged for neither.
Yes, I do. I bought the software, I didn't buy a license to use it. I own a physical CD with the data wrote on it. That is mine, not Blizzards, reading the data and using the contents are up to me to decide.
I bought a package, containing software, as well as a key. That key allows me to install the software, as well as link it to an account to play on Blizzards servers. If I choose not to play on theirs, that doesn't make the software any less mine, I didn't pay any less for it.
I hope you are joking. The law is wrong all the time, it's one of the reasons we have courts, they help decide when a law is wrong.
No, I bought a CD containing Windows XP on it. It didn't say on the box "You are purchasing the right to use this product when we feel like letting you". At least on WoW it does say that a monthly fee is required to play, so its fair to say they did give us a little warning. With XP, if Microsoft decides they don't want to authenticate your copy, you are dead in the water, even if it is a perfectly legal copy. That, in my book, is practically theft. Microsoft would be denying me something I legally bought. And it is my right to protect my investment by circumventing their stupid block. I understand that this may opt me out of updates, because those are a service, and I understand that you should have to play by the book to receive the service.
Not doubting that, but this is a personal use case. I'm playing my copy of software I purchased. I didn't purchase a license. The box didn't say "World of Warcraft 1 user license". There is software sold that way, and that's fine, because I am buying a license, and I know it, but that's not what the box says.
On top of that, you can't have me agree to something after purchase. If I buy something, all terms and conditions must be up front before purchase. Not after. This stuff is non-refundable. So if I don't agree with the terms after I purchased the software, I have no way of returning it, no way of getting my money back. So unless I was informed about the limits and rights before I bought it, they don't apply. This is, of course, within reasonable copyright law. I understand that taking one piece of software and installing it on my whole families machines is wrong, because its no longer personal use, but household. This could be said for copying Books, CDs, or any easily duplicated item, most of which don't try to make you agree to something post sale.