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Daniel Batal talks about Filmora "lifetime license"
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<blockquote data-quote="jv16" data-source="post: 1017891" data-attributes="member: 98343"><p>I don't think that's fair. My company has had a lifetime license for many years and we have always honored that. I hope any company that offers a lifetime license but doesn't honor that gets sued, either by individual customers or by a class action lawsuit.</p><p></p><p>And people should absolutely sue Wondershare for not honoring their lifetime license. It should be fairly straightforward case. A company cannot just decide one day that they no longer follow a promise like that. As far as I know, there was nothing in their original contract (end user license agreement) that would allow them to do this. And even if there was, there are things like unfair contract clauses, which can be taken to court.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="jv16, post: 1017891, member: 98343"] I don't think that's fair. My company has had a lifetime license for many years and we have always honored that. I hope any company that offers a lifetime license but doesn't honor that gets sued, either by individual customers or by a class action lawsuit. And people should absolutely sue Wondershare for not honoring their lifetime license. It should be fairly straightforward case. A company cannot just decide one day that they no longer follow a promise like that. As far as I know, there was nothing in their original contract (end user license agreement) that would allow them to do this. And even if there was, there are things like unfair contract clauses, which can be taken to court. [/QUOTE]
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