JamesDixon
GM Extraordinaire
Oh ffs. The company is not making money with superior goods and services. They are using other business strategy, dirty tactics. You are too busy worrying about the modder - who doesn't matter - that you are willing to aid companies in an economy where goods mean nothing, service is dominated by finance, profit means nothing unless profit is maximized.Oh jesus christ, I'm not talking about gaming, I'm talking about all of life. About consumerism. About enabling an entity like Nexus to continue profiting off advertisements while you get no royalty. Nexus is a business. And it's playing dirty tactics (legal ones, obviously).
Don't be myopic. On one side, the fucking modders. On the other, the business. And all the other businesses that Nexus pushed aside. Which is why Deadlystream and ModDB will probably be there quite fine for modding whatever happens to Nexus.
This applies to everything, not just gaming. Unless you think AAA publishers are magicians who got successful... Well, they used you.
You don't get to earn royalties when you are using someone else's property without license. You cannot earn money as it's not your property. Lawyers have repeatedly said that when you use someone else's product to make a mod you have no ownership to said mod. The company that does allow mods does so out of the kindness of their hearts.
You know what would be great? If social media decided that you could not delete things and then pointed to this situation as precedence.
And, no, you are not going to notice these things happening because you're not supposed to know.
Moving the goals posts and presented a strawman to win. Come back to my position and answer it directly.
Not only did you move the goal posts and used a strawman, but you had to pull out an invalid comparison logical fallacy. You don't own your posts on their platform. You signed that away when you signed up for their service. Thus, no copyrights apply.