As expected, but it ended better than I would've thought.
1. It was locked, not deleted.
2. It stayed up for a long time for being "offensive", as moderation continued elsewhere on the BBS. This means that EA upper staff had to approve what was to be done with the thread, and
they read it.
3. They acknowledge that there's a problem, and that's the first step to recovery.
4. "at this time."
So my question is, was this a clause that did exist for Sims 1 sites and was removed for whatever reason
The bandwidth permission was announced first, and only put into the Sims 1 EULA some time afterward.
The dot-com bust killed off free and ad-supported hosting for a few years- a very real and serious issue at the time. "Modest" gave the sites wiggle room because Maxis didn't want to set an amount, and then have things get worse.
What's happened is that EA's lawyers realized that the bandwidth permission left them open to / promoted paysites. This doesn't revoke the permissions given to Sims 1
for it's time. Since it's not present in the current EULA, EA
does not have to honor it with Sims 2 sites.
If anyone tried to get into it seriously, it was promised by Maxis, not EA.
It's moot as to what would happen to Sims 1 paysites if EA sued, though.
First, EA wouldn't go after any site that was a real donation operation, not beyond cease and desist. Very few sites meet the definition.
Second, paysites couldn't save themselves even if the language
was in the Sims 2 EULA, because paysites are stores. Whenever you can't get content until you give money, that's legally a sale. Subscriptions are sales as well, despite what many believe. Even the little "donation gifts" are considered a sale unless there's some way to get them for free.
Good intentions wouldn't protect anyone. Ignorance of the law is not an excuse.
I've heard conflicting reports as to what's in the EULA for the new(ish) Sims 1 box sets.
This is important because part of all EULA language includes the right to change the rules at any time without prior notification. They can't change it and then sue you for having disobeyed unless you keep it up
after the change, but they don't have to notify you of revisions. You have to keep tabs on your own, if your game doesn't update dynamically.
If the Sims 1 boxsets have the omission, that means that EA won't support the bandwidth permission at all. Interesting if true.
notice they are calling fansites paysites here.
They can't say "paysite". That's a loaded word, and it would be admission that a distinction exists between them and free fansites.
It would be "commenting" on the issue.
If this inspires someone to go check for BBS/blog mentions, you should know that offhand comments by forum mods don't count as official company statements. This keeps EA clear if one of them goes insane and promises the next EP free or something, and in cases like this where they need to cover their asses until legal can draft up a real statement.
I think EA's employees will do in EA.
This is how almost all game companies treat their employees, especially around the holidays. It's an industry-wide problem, and other professions do the same things.
Sabotage (malicious or intentionally letting bugs slip) isn't likely. If caught or suspected, you'd never be able to work in a coding job again. Why go pyhrric when you could quit?
Bugs do get through more commonly in these situations, but it's almost always because the publisher (EA) doesn't pay for enough playtesting or tries to rush an unfinished, over-deadline game to make Christmas.
If you don't like it, vote with your wallet- don't pay for games released buggy. They get away with it because people accept first-day patches as normal.