@immibis said: @Qwerty said:
Software EULAs don't let you do this so they are usually worth less than the paper they are not printed on.
They're rarely printed on paper, so does that make them worth a negative amount? So I can charge the developers for the EULA?
No, you're misreading. He said they're worth less than the paper they're [b]not[/b] printed on. Since they are not printed on paper, the paper they are not printed on is all the paper in the world. (For the ones that are printed on paper, it's all the paper in the world except that bit.) Either way, the paper they are not printed on is worth a massive amount of money. The EULAs themselves, apparently, are worth some unspecified amount of money which is less than this.