I wrote this a few days ago, and decided not to post it, then to post it, then, well, whatever. Here it is.

<br><br>I don't do mods, so this doesn't directly pertain to me. However, I thought I might add my 2 cents in. First off, the backlash from your "you wanna get paid for a mod, then we must get paid" stance is already being felt. You've got people tripping all over themselves to be loyal to a product that hasn't even been released yet. Exhibiting the attitude that you want to make a buck coming and going with an iron fist (ala Micro$oft, Nintendo, etc) does not portrait the best face to the Pocket PC community, and will (has) put a bitter taste into some of your potential customers’ mouths. That's certainly true for those who were going to exhibit the ultimate support for your product by creating new levels.<br><br>Most importantly, legally, you don't really have any ground to stand on in the area of “mods must be freeware or else”. If a mod is comprised of 100% new content (which of course is the requirement to be able to sell mods for id Software titles like Quake), then there is nothing you can do to restrict someone else's work, even if it “happens” to be a chunk of data the Argentum engine can use. Of course when I say 100% content, I'm talking about the AI, binaries, images, etc, that are embedded in the mod pak. That’s also assuming that you aren’t “ionice’ing” or otherwise processing / building mods for the authors. In addition, to be safe, the author should not even use the word “Argentum”, or any part of the Argentum story line if they wish to create a commercial mod (per my dialog with id Software). Now if your datafiles contain some algorithm you invented and hold a US patent to, then you can regulate that (for example, Compuserve’s GIF algorithm, Nintendo’s NES cartridge format, etc). I'm sure Argentum hasn't generated any patents, so you can't regulate it in that way. Now, regardless of anything I’ve said to this point, if you litigate, you lose, regardless of the court’s outcome. Of course I’m not talking about warez here, but releasing commercial mods. You
might, by a miracle, be able to win litigation against someone for misusing your product. However that litigation would be against someone
using a mod, not the mod’s author / seller. Prosecuting your paying customers would be an incredibly stupid thing to do (obviously). Even trying to prosecute someone who is selling their mod would be a stupid thing to do. The Pocket PC community is very informed and close-knit (certainly true for those that actually go online and buy Pocket PC software). Word of such litigation would quickly spread, and the word 'Ionside' would be forever tainted. Further, the “Iron Fist control” mentality I keep talking about would give hackers some sense of misguided purpose or cause to their warez actions as well.<br><br>Finally, I don’t see how you “lose” money by not getting a cut if someone else sells a mod your company didn’t work on at all. I certainly don’t see how you can say that someone is stealing your cut from writing Argentum. Using that logic, you would “lose” far more money if the mod was never written in the first place. I think it likely that any commercial 3rd party mods would be fresh and of a totally different genre than what Ionside offers. That would likely prompt people to buy Argentum that never would have otherwise. Also, the “any press is good press” would definitely apply here.<br> <br>You need to let loose on the reigns just enough to allow room for Argentum to grow beyond would you can manufacture, produce or cajole by forcing (attempting) absolute control.<br> <br>Again, I don't make mods. I'm just providing you with an opinion from someone outside your company, who doesn't stand to make or loose a buck no matter what bad decisions are made. If I had ill will toward Ionside, then I wouldn’t be saying anything now, but wait and put you down after the fact.

But of course I’m not that type of person in the first place..

Again, again, I know Carp and Fredrick are generous people. Carp gave Pocket Quake to thousands of MIPS users, and Fredrick gave the whole community Weeboo, so I want to see you guys get your due reward (me too!), and I think you will reap more with a more lenient stance with Argentum.<br><br>Dan East