Still, you can't expect that a FEATURE of a specific product of a certain manufacturer to be compatible with it's direct competitor product as well, even though they share the same "functioning" environment. It makes no sense.
I am pretty sure no court would blame nVidia for not guaranteeing proper functioning of a feature of it's own hardware when a competitor's hardware is present on the same platform.
They are not obligated to make a feature of their own compatible with their competitor's products, therefore, they can avoid exposing it's own product/feature to a supposed non enjoyable/ non compatible/random experience by simply disabling that feature under specific conditions.
It's their feature, they decide how you can use it or not.
Don't agree? Don't buy.
Problem solved.
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