Incase you forget they limit the number of PS4s you can do that on.
Where exactly does it say that?
The PS3 does this already, except in their case it is for downloadable content.
I have a PS3 and frequently download games from my account on to other people's consoles.
Read the bloody patent.
When?
I'm not sure what you're actually asking me. If you're asking when I've last done this, the answer is last Wednesday. If you're asking when you should read the patent, before you misrepresented its contents would have been a good time, but I guess now would suffice.
I'm okay with this. No second hand sales equals more first hand sales which probably equals more games getting made to a higher quality. THQ might be in a lot less trouble if this had been done a few years ago.
Couldn't the same argument be applied to anything, eg cars?
More money does not mean better products per se. THQ are in trouble because no one wants to buy their games, not because people are reselling them (it would be quite hard for a second hand market to exist in a significant without a reasonable number of copies first sold first-hand).
Also for some people with less money, for example myself, this equals less games of probably lower quality. Those budget games tend to not be very good.
I disagree with your first point, but short of running an indepth simulation of a world where this change is made vs on where it isn't, it'll be pretty damn difficult to prove either way. I will say that the last three console games I purchased were all THQ, and all of them were preowned. It also seems likely that a higher return on each game (which there would be, I'm sure nobody is disputing that) could lead to less draconian release schedules and possibly even a greater inclination towards experimentation. It's all not quite the same as cars. Most drivers buy a vehicle every few years at best, most gamers buy games a hell of a lot more frequently than that. I'd say the average gamer stands to benefit more from increased prosperity in the gaming industry than the average driver in the automotive industry.
Your second point may well be true. This would likely benefit me a lot more than you, and at the risk of sounding like a Tory, I'm okay with that.
I have a PS3 and frequently download games from my account on to other people's consoles.
That just means you are breaking the EULA, it is not at all a (legal) solution to Neonivek's concern.
His concern seemed to be that such a thing is physically impossible. I would have thought that my literally doing (on a regular basis, even) the exact thing he is claiming cannot be done ought to alleviate said concerns. By the way, EULAs are not legally binding whatsoever. Bit of a schoolboy error there