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Culture War Roundup for the week of February 23, 2026

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No - the correct response is to explain to glock that those kind of morality clauses are void, severable and unenforceable. And I come from consumer advocacy point of view. Producer cannot tell the customer how their product can be used. That we have devolved our sense of what consumer rights should be so much is troubling.

Producer cannot tell the customer how their product can be used.

Yeah, but software mostly isn't bought. You're purchasing a license. True for the DoD too. And they absolutely tell you how it can and cannot be used. That's typically what a EULA does, among other things.

And once again EULAs are unadulterated evil. As is the 1201 of dmca. And dmca as a whole.

If they're unenforceable, why did the contract get terminated? Presumably, the mechanism of enforcement is the alignment of the model itself. It's more like, Glock made a gun that only fires in certain circumstances and you claim that this is void. Okay, if it's void, go ahead and do it. Oh, you can't?

"Producer could tell the customer how their product can be used" is also, historically (and currently), the main reason why there are no smart guns.