Orryyrro: Was I pushing for it? All I said was you can't say it doesn't have DRM if it has some physical means to stop you from selling it. Well, other than my pointing out the flaws in crazy_dave's argument. Either a game should have DRM or it shouldn't.
Well I would say you were pushing for it. You said:
Orryyrro: If I merely wished to sell copies, nothing currently on GOG's installers is preventing me from doing so, if I wish to
legally resell the game, GOG is preventing me from doing so.
So you are asking for the right to resell GOG games which are DRM-free and really are DRM-free. However, DRM-free does not equate with right-of-resell.
So yes, perhaps my use of "perfect" was an exaggeration for my system since no system is perfect, but "best" still applies quite nicely. :) DRM-free is DRM-free, but that does not mean right of resell. And no it doesn't sound like either of the games mentioned in the OP are truly DRM-free.
Darling_Jimmy: Except in Canada. Our copyright act doesn't assume guilt. It makes it quite clear that ownership is transferrable so long as the original owner destroys all backup copies when he or she ceases to be the owner. It's that simple, really.
It is just chowderheaded for GOG to be so concerned—on the one hand—that someone might not resell a game properly, all the while not caring about all the torrenting discussed several threads recently.
The only "logical" justification I can conceive is that it's a contractual stipulation made by some or all of the publishers.
Actually it's quite logical for GOG to be so concerned. For one, not every country has the same copyright laws of Canada and GOG has to comply with all of them. Secondly, uploading a game requires an active amount of dishonesty. Simply not destroying copies requires you to do ... nothing. You don't have to be actively dishonest. Could you put up a link to Canada's copyright law?