Das neue Gesetz in Kalifornien zwingt digitale Shops dazu, zuzugeben, dass sie Inhalte nur lizenzieren und nicht kaufen. | Digitale Shops dürfen Wörter wie „kaufen“ oder „erwerben“ nicht mehr verwenden, es sei denn, sie geben dies offen.

https://www.theverge.com/2024/9/26/24254922/california-digital-purchase-disclosure-law-ab-2426

7 Comments

  1. PureWineQuaffer on

    In other words, they don’t want to actually protect us from losing access to content we’ve paid for, they just want to normalize the idea that we *will* lose access at some time in the future.

  2. GilliamYaeger on

    This is actually a very good sign. This was one of the goals of [AccursedFarms’s Stop Killing Games campaign](https://www.stopkillinggames.com) (specifically getting companies to admit before purchase that there’s a use-by date on purchased software) and – while not an ideal end goal – it means that someone in the California government has started paying attention to it.

    This could just be a first step to something more concrete.

  3. AggravatingIssue7020 on

    California seems to be unlike the usa , they often do these actually good and reasonable things, protect buyers, emission regulations.

    The argument that allowing misleading labels is good for the economy is also stupid beyond belief.

    Honest labelling will just create new space and opportunities, an ultra capitalist would say, right:-)

  4. rent. they should just say ‘rent’.

    because it’s a rentier economy.

  5. oldaliumfarmer on

    Looks like it should be applied to the automotive industry as well.

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