Quote:
Originally posted by Christian
Thats like you are putting a sign in front of your house: "When you enter all your money belong to the owner of this house".
Such rules arent legal.
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Let me put it this way: A house is basically private property, The instant you set foot on that person's lot or inside thier home you imediately put yourself under thier authority. At which point, you are then subjected to any rules or guidelines the person living in that home may have. If they have a rule saying that visitor's money is thier property, they can. Its not right, but they can do it or at least its possible to do it here in the US most likely.
Graal is the same way. Its a "private" game. Owned and operated by a business, not the government. You are subjected to whatever rules there may be and you are required to agree to them to play/enter. You willingly agree to a household's rules when you enter the owner's property so its the same thing. If you do not agree to the rules or standards then you should not come onto someone else's property. This is something common with any online game. Its called the EULA (End-User License Agreement). It contains any kind of legal information that is pertinent to the software which is to protect you, the user, and the company that produces and sells the software.