Saturday, November 29, 2008

Video Game Installs Anti-Piracy Software

The freshly-launched Spore video game that lets people play God has been hit with a lawsuit accusing its publisher of slipping devilish anti-piracy software onto players’ machines.

The lawsuit filed this week in a federal court in Northern California contends that players weren’t warned about tenacious digital rights management (DRM) software that stays in computers even if game programs are removed.

Spore publisher Electronic Arts told buyers that there are anti-piracy safeguards but didn’t advise people the SecuROM program it used “is essentially a virus that installs itself without warning,” the lawsuit alleges.

The DRM software attaches itself to the “command and control centers” of computers and can track activities, block certain operations and even disrupt hardware, according to the suit filed this week.

A US woman was named as the plaintiff in the lawsuit, which is seeking class action status to represent all Spore buyers.

The filing demands a jury trial and wants Electronic Arts forced to pay unspecified damages as well as turn over money it has made from Spore, which went on sale in Europe, Asia, Australia and the US this month.

Electronic Arts said it does not discuss pending litigation.

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