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- Path: sparky!uunet!cis.ohio-state.edu!ucbvax!SMITHKLINE.COM!poehland%phvax.dnet
- From: poehland%phvax.dnet@SMITHKLINE.COM
- Newsgroups: comp.sys.atari.8bit
- Subject: Old Software
- Message-ID: <9207272152.AA21721@smithkline.com>
- Date: 27 Jul 92 21:52:10 GMT
- Sender: daemon@ucbvax.BERKELEY.EDU
- Lines: 101
-
- Tsk, tsk, tsk! Now Michael, you are such a very naughty boy! How many times
- have Mummy & Daddy told you about that temper of yours? You know, Santa Claus
- might not come to your house this year if you keep doing that. So run along
- now & apologize to Uncle Darek. Unle Darek is a very nice man & has given us
- many fine & wonderful things.
-
- <Aside, to Uncle Darek>. Really, Uncle, it certainly was not very nice of you
- to label us all pirates. Dear me, Joe 6-Pack. Stupid, moron, & other ravings.
- I do hope you haven't been skipping your lithium tablets again. You KNOW what
- happens when you do that, the doctor will have to commence those nasty shock
- treatments. You don't want THAT again, do you?
-
- So, you two boys shake hands now. There, that's better. Uncle Darek, wipe
- that foam off your mouth. And Michael, quit sticking out your tongue or it's
- no Santa for you this year.....
-
- Us Alchemists are getting too old for this. Martha, I thought you told me the
- children were all grown up! Sheesh. <tee-hee!>
-
- OK, serious now. The experiences- & attitudes- expressed by people such as
- Jeff McWilliams & Uncle Fester are quite common. Most of us still in this
- market admit it only furtively. Jeff only expressed sentiments which quite a
- few 8bitters hold. Myself among them. I, too, passed thru a stage a stage
- when people handed me copied software like it was no big deal, & I accepted it.
- I guess it was a period of 8 months, right after I bought my first 800XL. Then
- I read an editorial on piracy in ANALOG. I changed my ways.
-
- I DESTROYED all the pirated software in my possession.
- I went out & BOUGHT as much of the destroyed material as I could find. That was
- in 1985 or '86, when there was still a viable 8bit market. I replaced about 95%
- of the destroyed material over the next year or so. Not only did I have the
- satisfaction of knowing I was supporting the legitimate 8bit market, but it sure
- was nice to get a *manual* with the software, which the pimple-peppered
- teenybopper pirates never bothered to reproduce. (In my area most of the
- pirates turned out to be 13-16 year-olds who swapped software & baseball cards
- interchangeably.)
-
- About a year ago, in the July/Aug 1991 Current Notes, I raised up the indig-
- nant hand of an honest user & smote a mighty blow against 8bit piracy by
- publicly exposing the DataRush operation as the most blatant pirate vendor I
- had ever seen. Using money that was later repaid to me by Current Notes, I
- purchased a number of copies of then-current commercial software, & published
- the list of pirate titles I had obtained. One of the companies whose products
- were being pirated elected to pursue the DataRush operation & persuaded its
- owner to adopt a different occupation. I counted a great victory, & waited for
- the 8bit market to rebound. It didn't.
-
- In all of 1991, there were only 2 new releases of commercial software for the
- 8bits. They were: Movie Credits by LJK; & ChromaCAD by Marv Seaman. With
- some difficulty I expedited arrangements to get reviews of those 2 programs
- published in CN.
-
- But that was last year. Now it's 1992, & everything is different.
-
- In 1991, Atari still officially supported the 8bit community. But beginning
- in 1992, Atari has kicked out butts out in the cold.
- ICD has abandoned us.
- EXPLORER, whose 8bit coverage was never more than superficial, has undergone
- yet another shakeup (the phrase "Jack attack" comes to mind).
- PSAN folded.
-
- And I must confess I have had second thoughts about the DataRush affair. He was
- so darn brazen about it, it was like he wore a neon sign that said, "I'm a
- pirate & proud of it!" I did the right thing then, & given the same circum-
- stances I would do it again today.
-
- But if I encountered a pirate who had the good sense to stay in his dark slime
- pit where he belongs, would I still go after him, skewer the vermin on the end
- of my pen, & expose the monster in the pages of some magazine? I honestly
- don't know, & I hope the situation never arises. The very fact that I now
- vacillate on this question troubles me deeply.
-
- In this, Year One of our excommunication from the Tramiel Entente, not one
- single new piece of commercial 8bit software has appeared. That also troubles
- me greatly.
-
- In the past couple issues of this Digest several people have expressed quasi-
- legal opinions on the legality of copying abandoned software. Judging by the
- contradictory nature of those opinions, the legal issues are just as murky as
- the moral ones.
-
- Yet, as our community contines to sputter on despite all the currents that are
- flowing against us, this is an issue which more than any other, tears at the
- conscience & knaws upon the inner fabric of moral sensibility. Most of us out
- here are very decent people. We are not pirates or criminals. We want to do
- what is right.
-
- But we also want to SURVIVE, to maintain our faith in the brotherhood & compan-
- ionship of other 8bit users like ourselves. We have all paid our dues, & we
- have a RIGHT to this existence!
-
- Perhaps if as much energy were expended upon serious professional legal research
- & open discussion of the moral issues involved as was spent upon the recent
- silly flame war, we might actually accomplish something useful for ourselves.
-
- - BEN POEHLAND
- The Alchemist
-
- Responses to this msg, post to csa8 or IA8, not to me personally.
-
- *****************************************************************************
-