> Apple is slightly different -- the licence for Mac OS X stipulates > that you're only allowed to run it on Apple-branded hardware. This is > somewhere between rare and unique, though, and it has recently been > relaxed slightly to permit use of hypervisors.
EULAs have the same value as toilet paper and should be used for the same purpose. Legally, they can and have been enforced. So their value is not nil when it comes to screwing up someone.
