Who gives a toss about 'legal basis for suing' other than armchair theorists and mass debaters?
Well, *I* do - because I think this is a bad decision that's going to end up biting consumers in the backside. It took *work* for the judge to misinterpret the law this badly, and that, to me, indicates there is an ideological thing going on beneath the surface somewhere.
When Ideologues are sure they're not doing anything wrong, they tend to be open about what they're trying to do - when they try to hide stuff behind a facade, then they're pretty sure that people wouldn't agree if they thought it through.
So, I think *you* are going to care down the line just what you lost with this at some point.
If a human is playing against a machine...and the intent is that the game is supposed to be played against/between humans then not only is the machine out of place...so is its advantage [if any].
OK....so one end of this is debating a reality of whether Blizzard has been fucked over by this twit...while the other end is debating whether a judge should define a transgression as being all about copyright...or not.
Hopefully the legal profession [or whatever it's called in the US] can cure their inadequacies on the one hand....and this bot maker/seller can have his nostrils slit with a cease and desist on the other.
The 'advantage' is tangible and its 'unfairness' is still self-evident in spite of arguments purporting to be to the contrary.
No one here has argued that it's 'Fair'. I wouldn't even argue that 'Life is unfair, get over it' - it's cheating, everyone here knows it's cheating. I think the guy is kinda scuzzy myself.
Do you *want* to live in a world where 'kinda scuzzy' is a valid legal term for a lawsuit? "Ladies and Gentleman of the Jury - What you need to decide is whether a 'Reasonable Man' would find my client scuzzy, and I say a reasonable man would not."
There are neither civil nor criminal 'scuzziness' penalties, and the law doesn't match up for this case.
He is fucking another person's product/property....about as cleverly as those arseholes who call themselves 'grafittists'.
It's only 'art' when [if] you get away with it.
The problem here is that - no, he's not.
He has not *touched* Blizzards property. If he had, it would be *direct* copyright infringement, not *contributory* infringement.
Let's be clear - when you say this is a good ruling, you are arguing that a company can withdraw your legal right to use their software, based on other actions that you do that are themselves *legal*.
If there had been no EULA, then everything would have been legal, even with this decision. Nothing in this decision says that what glider did was illegal.
This decision says that, point by point:
1) Blizzards customer paid for Blizzard software.
True
2) Blizzards EULA says that their customers are not allowed to use this *legal* program.
This is false, because as consumers (not merchants) Blizzards customers are specifically not bound by this kind of "industry Standard" aggreement under the Uniform Commercial Code.
3) In using this program, they violate the EULA, which ends the license for the software they paid for.
This is false because the Copyright acts specifically exempts 'owners' of software from requiring a license to use the software by copying it into the memory of the computer. It is obvious from the context of the statute that this refers to consumers, because *if* it referred to copyright owners, it would be pointless.
4) The customer used Blizzard Software *anyway*, thereby infringing upon Blizzards copyright.
This would be true IN THIS CASE, if and only if both steps two *and* step three were true!
5) By selling a program whose use, while itself legal, violated the EULA, MDY *contributed* to the violation of Blizzards exclusive copyrights.
THIS IS IMPORTANT! If the customer has infringed upon blizzards copyright, then this is true. It would be true if, for instance, the customer were using software that was sold for the purpose of forging license keys for a program so the customer could use it illegally, or any of a dozen other ways that someone *could* actually violate blizzards copyright. It just doesn't apply here because for the customer to be violating Blizzards copyright, Step four must be true, which requires *both* step two *and* step three to be true.
6) By Contributing to this infringement, MDY is liable for all profits plus punitive damages.
I'm fine with this - if he *had* contributed to infringing Blizzards IP, he would owe these damages.
Lets make this clear:
If you accept this decision as good legal decisionmaking you are accepting that, in the ninth circuit:
A) If you accept an End User License Agreement when installing software, you are completely bound to not do any
*otherwise legal action* that the EULA forbids.
If Microsoft puts a paragraph in Words that says you are not allowed to criticize Microsoft, and you use Word, they can sue *you* (for infringement) and *the place you criticized them at* (for contributory infringement). If you use free software on the internet, and it says you are bound to not contribute to the Republican Party, that is a valid interpretation of this decision, and they can sue the GOP for punitive damages.
Would they win? Probably not - this will have to be pared back at some point, but how that's going to happen is anyone guess if this decision stands for the moment. Will you be allowed to do other things, but not use prescribed software? Will you not be allowed to use software that interacts with the original program? Will the whole thing be overturned? The point is that Glider, in and of itself, is perfectly legal - this decision *requires* the fact that Blizzards customers used Glider in contravention of the EULA.

Any software you have *ever* used that has a license that does not *specifically* include the right to copy the software from hard disk to memory, means the copyright owner of that software can sue *you*. Legally. Because you don't own the software, you only have a license for it, despite the *specific* fact that the copyright act allows you to do so.
Part A) could be argued out - UCC (Like all the 'Uniform' Codes) actually varies from state to state depending on the exact language the state legislature adopted - it's possible a state might not have adopted the consumer protections and so on. Part

? That's just dumb.