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posted by LaminatorX on Saturday October 18 2014, @08:15PM   Printer-friendly
from the pray-I-don't-alter-it-any-further dept.

TechDirt reports:

Nintendo: It protects what it believes it owns with great vigor. The company has rarely missed an opportunity to make sure that other people are not allowed to alter or mess with the stuff Nintendo insists is Nintendo's. In an apparent effort to maximize the irony combo-meter, Nintendo also has been known to make sure that customers don't mess with or alter the properties those customers actually own, such as online support for games that Nintendo decided to alter long after purchase... just because.

But the cold grip of Nintendo's control over its customers' property is apparently no longer limited to games. Nintendo recently released an update for the Wii U that forces you to "agree" to a new end-user license agreement, or else it simply [locks up] the console altogether.

This is how Nintendo's update to its end-user license agreement (EULA) for the Wii U works, as described by YouTube user "AMurder0fCrows" in this video. He didn't like the terms of Nintendo's updated EULA and refused to agree. He may have expected that, like users of the original Wii and other gaming consoles, he would have the option to refuse software or EULA updates and continue to use his device as he always had before. He might have to give up online access, or some new functionality, but that would be his choice. That's a natural consumer expectation in the gaming context--but it didn't apply this time. Instead, according to his video, the Wii U provides no option to decline the update, and blocks any attempt to access games or saved information by redirecting the user to the new EULA. The only way to regain the use of the device is to click "Agree."

gewg_ objects to the use of "brick" to describe something that can be set right with a software tweak and does not require soldering equipment to correct the condition.

 
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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Sunday October 19 2014, @09:48PM

    by Anonymous Coward on Sunday October 19 2014, @09:48PM (#107626)

    It is grounds for lawsuit in this case. An equivalent would be if your mortgage provider declared that you have to sign a new mortgage agreement for a higher rate and if you don't, then you are not allowed back into your home. It is a license agreement through coercion. In legal speak, racketeering. A justice system that was truly just (i.e. equal and equitable) would RICO the whole lot of 'em.