True, it’s impossible to enforce. To me, it’s about ethics. I don’t want to do sleazy things in my business, so I respected their EULA. I don’t want to feel like I’m doing something illegal or unethical. But, this whole time that I’ve been avoiding using their synths in my loop packs I’ve felt uneasy about it, something was nagging at me. Now I realize that their EULA is unethical and crosses the line, when it comes to their synths.IMO if you're making loops that come from sampled instruments or soft synths etc. then it's near impossible for them to enforce any sort of copyright. I would think they tell everyone not to use their products at all because there are dips out there that would take Play instrument loops and just add another instrument in, call it their own and sell it. How the hell are they going to enforce you using a preset you created from an INIT patch on Massive with few violin strikes and a subtly changed Battery kit in a loop though?
Anyone remember that fiasco with FL Studio and Deadmause? He sued people using the loops he created included with FL in a song if I remember right.
Statistics: Posted by Danilo Villanova — Wed Feb 21, 2024 6:00 pm