Never heard of this before. May I ask what game it was? Never had this happen to me and I've used it since the beginning (hard to beat getting free games).
It seems like an innocent thing, but I get where they're coming from. No one wants to turn around and have anywhere between 4-50GB missing from their local storage for something they didn't explicitly authorize.
I call BS on that. That is illegal. And never has that happened to me. Considering i have obtained every free game, its not happened once to me after purchasing.
I call BS on that. That is illegal. And never has that happened to me. Considering i have obtained every free game, its not happened once to me after purchasing.
It does depend where you are, but this is what I was referring to
The Computer Fraud and Abuse Act covers any unauthorized software installations. Deceptive trade practices of any kind also violate the Federal Trade Commission Act. Additionally, the Electronic Communications Privacy Act makes it unlawful for companies to violate the security of customers' personal information.
Which is why I think the poster of the comment may have misunderstood it. Probably purchased the game and selected something which immediately downloaded it instead of cancelling the download request. I do not believe one bit that EPIC will download software without any approval or permission. Unless you opt in to something embedded in the settings.
Anyhow...
My one and only gripe at Epic was that I was a little naive in thinking that since they gave a bigger cut to developers, we would see lower pricing on game titles. Some it is clearly cheaper than Steam, others I see no difference at all. So it feels like a deceiving promise. Although it could be that developers set the pricing? I dunno.
overall, I am enjoying Epic titles. Mech 5 is just amazing, the free titles are pretty damn good and I see some freebies, being titles I paid for on Steam.
Yeah Warchild is right, another point is someone has to accept a EULA before any software can be installed, since games have their own EULAs separate to the store front in this case "stealth installing" a game would be illegal; Though I doubt the software even allows the EULA to be bypassed, so presumably it's user error here.