Non-game software doesn’t. It’s much harder to convince politicians.
The argument for non-game software would be economical. But most big companies pay the subscriptions, since they want to have the latest version (if not for the features, at least for the security patches). So they’re not affected. The most affected by this is consumers and small companies. Which don’t have a lot of power.
The way to fix this is to support the competitors that don’t do this kind of shit. For office in particular, there’s even free alternatives.
Games have a cultural element to it.
Non-game software doesn’t. It’s much harder to convince politicians.
The argument for non-game software would be economical. But most big companies pay the subscriptions, since they want to have the latest version (if not for the features, at least for the security patches). So they’re not affected. The most affected by this is consumers and small companies. Which don’t have a lot of power.
The way to fix this is to support the competitors that don’t do this kind of shit. For office in particular, there’s even free alternatives.