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by Accujack 1422 days ago
That's not how licenses work. If they change the EULA, users of the software have to agree to it again for it to bind them. Usually what happens if a library license changes is that users are stuck on an old (potentially unsupported) version if they don't want to agree to the new EULA.

I doubt the EULA as written is enforceable.

1 comments

Exactly, this is BS and would not fly in most half-decent legal systems, specially given the timing.