don't despair!Feel free to continue donating to charity, to the developers, or any combination thereof below. We will still be distributing humble bundles to anyone who contributes.

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don't despair!Feel free to continue donating to charity, to the developers, or any combination thereof below. We will still be distributing humble bundles to anyone who contributes.
(5/11/10)Wartender wrote:Feel free to continue donating to charity, to the developers, or any combination thereof below. We will still be distributing humble bundles to anyone who contributes.
(5/15/10)MidKnight wrote:...And it's over!
It says right at the bottom of the website "the promotion is over" and you can no longer access any purchase page.Wartender wrote:well how do you know? the website is still up and running and seems functional, and i haven't seen anywhere that they've stopped giving out bundles...
This is why software with educational/personal licenses available at lower/no cost is the best thing ever.KDR_11k wrote:BTW, large companies would prefer class A piracy for expensive business software over people choosing cheaper alternatives because that gives them training in the software and will encourage future employers to use that software. I don't think stuff like autoCAD is supposed to sell to random consumers.
Statistically, piracy rates are WAY WAY higher in economically poor countries than economically rich countries. Something like 40% of all piracy comes out of china.Neddie wrote:A. Need - I.E. I need AutoCAD for a class and cannot afford a copy. - This is uncommon, as most pirates are neither physically isolated nor particularly poorly off, economically.
this more implies that you pirate games simply because it's easy to get away with it. Multiplayer keys have nothing to do with replayability or value of asking price.Spawn_Retard wrote:i torrent because i do not want to pay for games for which i may consider not worth the asking price and or replay value.
If any of these games had a online multiplayer that required a real key to play, then i would consider playing them.
Considering the bundle didnt come with this, i dont see why id need to pay for them D:
If you buy a game that doesn't use a key to identify you, what have you bought?SwiftSpear wrote:Multiplayer keys have nothing to do with [snip] value of asking price.
Try to explain in simple form what you are saying because other than the close resemblance to my post I have no idea what you want to express.MidKnight wrote:@Regret:
If you have paper currency that doesn't have any sort of material backing, what do you own?
If money doesn't offer direct conversion into gold and/or other benefits directly related to it being backed by something that is intrinsically hard to obtain, then it's inferior to fake money. Money in this case doesn't require the hassle of keeping large sores of valuable materials in massive government storerooms, works without a phsical form of backing if original currency has one and is free, while retaining all the functionality of the original.
I find it fascinating how people abide to something that can be copied for virtually no cost to the 'manufacturer'. It lets banks create money out of thin air, then loan it.
It is worthless on it's own, but there are things/services you can exchange it for in this society.MidKnight wrote:I'm pointing out that your reasoning could also be extended to imply that money not supported by a gold standard (eg: almost all paper money currently in circulation) is worthless,