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Originally Posted by sabret00the
ok hopefully the last post on the subject.
how many of the subforum sites members will actually contribute to your community, will you run a community or just let your subforums make use of your license, how active a roll will you play in the subforums, how much input will you have into the subforums, what about moderation, will that be based on global rules? what if one of the sub-forums is something that you didn't envisage, how much of the content are you going to check to make sure it doesn't void your license? what will the subforums communitys be called? and will the members of said subforums even know you exist?
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I have a hammer in my garage. That hammer was purchased from Home Depot with the implied agreement that I would use it to hammer things. If I use it to prop open a door, have I violated the terms of that agreement?
Furthermore, that hammer can do alot of great things. IMAGINE IT! I could build a house with that hammer! I could make a birds house for sick little birds...I might even use it to hang a picture next to my computer! But then again, I could also use it to build a shell casing for a weapon of mass desctruction. I could use it to bludgeon the head of a person I don't like anymore. I could use it to destroy my house, instead of improve upon it.
The point here is that damn near everything in this world can be used for good or evil. What gives any organization the right to tell us how to use the product we purchase from them? Banning a hack like this would be like the US Government saying that there is a mandatory 5 day waiting period on aluminum tubing because they *might* be used in the process of enriching uranium.
I understand that Jelsoft is interested in protecting their product, but there is a fine line between protectionism and isolationism...