Ubisoft Reflections founder Martin Edmonson has defended“Always On” DRM, which requires gamers to permanently be online so they can constantly prove their innocence to Ubisoft. DespiteDriver: San Franciscorelaxing its DRMin the face of PC gamer backlash, Edmonson is still a big believer in the system.

“You have to do something,” he argued to Eurogamer. “It’s just, simply, PC piracy is at the most incredible rates. This game cost a huge amount of money to develop, and it has to be, quite rightly, quite morally correctly, protected. If there was very little trouble with piracy then we wouldn’t need it.”

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Edmonson then went on to defend online passes, going for a “f*ck you” double-whammy: “If people don’t buy the game when it first comes out and wait and pay for rental or for second-hand usage, then the publisher sees absolutely nothing of that. [The online pass is] just one of those things we have to get used to. It’s going to happen.”

I absolutelyhatethat “publisher sees nothing” argument. They already saw $60 off any game sold used, and they’ve likely made far more with whatever day-one DLC they release alongside it. Oh wait, you already know that because I’m not talking to a bunch ofidiots.

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