--- [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> How is the destruction of an individual's property
> enforceable?  As Clark,
> I believe, stated, Joe Gamer doesn't care about OGL,
> they just want the
> books.  Now, say Joe Gamer owns book Y by company X,
> and bought it directly
> from the company.  Company Y has been found in
> breach, and has had the
> license revoked, and has, by the license, told
> everyone who has purchased
> books from them to destroy said books.  Does Joe
> Gamer *have* to destroy
> the book?

The book Joe Gamer now possess is an illegal product. 
So yes, Joe Gamer can be forced to destroy a product
he has no right to possess.  It's of course unlikely
that it would ever happen and unlikely to be worth the
effort for anyone to bother.  In your example, Company
Y would probably just inform everyone they are aware
of having the book and then assume those people obeyed
the law and destroyed the property.  Joe Gamer most
likely won't be destroying the book, but it's probably
not worth anyone's effort to follow up.  (And if Joe
Gamer does destroy the book, they should probably do
so by sending it back to the publisher & getting their
money back.)

alec

__________________________________________________
Do you Yahoo!?
Yahoo! Mail Plus - Powerful. Affordable. Sign up now.
http://mailplus.yahoo.com
_______________________________________________
Ogf-l mailing list
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://mail.opengamingfoundation.org/mailman/listinfo/ogf-l

Reply via email to