Posted 1 day ago
@nightmarechild
At least you know for next time, I guess. If you don't have access to your existing mixes at all, you still have the stream route. Though I don't see why you wouldn't have access to them and it's not like you're short of mixes to use with 5000 tracks if you do.
Speaking of legality however, I imagine IMVU are fully covered. If the terms are at all similar to those for credits and other products you purchase, you're essentially buying a license to use those things. Which also means if you're ever banned or IMVU shuts down and you lose all of your stuff, they're under no obligation to reimburse you for the stuff. A lot of digital media follows that same TOS or EULA these days. Frankly, I don't agree with it when it comes to certain media you've paid for. But I can agree with waiving that ownership if you're banned of your own accord, or if the service shuts down. It's contextual, granted, but in IMVU's case I wouldn't expect them to reimburse a penny if they suddenly decided to shut things down tomorrow, as devastated as I'd be.
If I had to guess, I'd assume it's the same type of deal with the music store. You can no longer purchase it or access certain parts of it due to a change in license agreement. Though I really don't see any reason why users shouldn't be able to use the music they already own to the same extent. If they (and you) can't, it's purely down to legality and would've been in their ToS -- it's not so different from Rockstar removing certain music tracks from some of their games due to expired licenses, despite people having already bought the game(s) as-is. Ultimately it sucks and it isn't morally right, but it is nonetheless a right they have -- or don't have, in the case of expired agreements.