On Thu, 8 Aug 2019 07:51:00 -0400
rhkra...@gmail.com wrote:

Hello rhkra...@gmail.com,

>   * that statement / requirment is illegal (or not supported by (US?)
> law)

A brief internet search resulted in me reading an article stating that,
in the USA at least, the EULA supersedes the user's legal allowance for
reverse engineering (case cited in the article) the software.

See;
<https://reverseengineering.stackexchange.com/questions/60/is-reverse-engineering-and-using-parts-of-a-closed-source-application-legal>

So, when a person agrees to the terms of the EULA, they waive their
legal right to reverse engineer.  If you wish to NOT waive your rights,
then you don't accept the EULA.  Of course you then won't be able to
install, never mind use, the software.  Catch-22.

-- 
 Regards  _
         / )           "The blindingly obvious is
        / _)rad        never immediately apparent"
Kill joy, bad guy, big talking, small fry
Death On Two Legs - Queen

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