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- From: Steve.Withers@bbs.actrix.gen.nz
- Newsgroups: comp.bbs.misc
- Subject: Re: Piracy, anyone?
- Message-ID: <1992Dec20.190853.11518@actrix.gen.nz>
- Date: 20 Dec 92 19:08:53 GMT
- References: <BzE35s.Az1@news.cso.uiuc.edu>
- Sender: Steve.Withers@actrix.gen.nz (Steve Withers)
- Organization: Actrix Information Exchange
- Lines: 66
-
- In article <BzE35s.Az1@news.cso.uiuc.edu> dlanglan@uxa.cso.uiuc.edu (super-dave) writes:
- > Warning!!! This post contains material which may be unsuitable for
- > sensitive, self-righteous readers who believe that software pirates are the
- > reason that God created firing squads. Let ye among you who is without
-
- bit deleted
-
- > I am a fan of most types of software piracy, game cracking (as an art
- > form), and hacking (as a hobby).
-
- a bit more.....
-
- > Commercial software companies are soaking Joe PeeCee as well as
- > corporations, and the only difference is that Ford Motor Company can
- > afford $500 per computer for a word processing package. Should I just shrug
- > and buy an inferior product like Microsoft Works because I can't afford Word
- > for Windows? If you can get by without tech support and documentation,
- > more power to you!
-
- and a bit more...
-
- > Please respond in earnest to this newsgroup or directly to me for discreet
- > opinions. Pirates unite! I would like to assemble a mailing list of
- > those sympathetic to the above article - please e-mail me.
-
- Piracy is not something that I would recommend. It represents using the work
- of other without paying them for it.
-
- Having said that......some companies beg to have their software pirated.
- Microsoft, for example, protects nothing. They use piracy to enhance and
- extend their position in the market. Programs that are protected - like Lotus
- apps - lose ground because people do get the try-before-you-buy experience.
-
- Also - outside the US, piracy is very popular. Many US software companies
- charge "foreigners" *more* than in the US - despite the fact that most
- "foreigners" have much lower incomes in terms of US dollars.
-
- In NZ, we earn about the same *number* of NZ$'s as an American earns US$'s.
- But our dollar is worth about 50 cents US. So we earn half.
-
- An example of what I am talking about would be Proportional Software - the
- makers the DCF/2 (disk compression software for OS/2 v2.0). US buyers pay
- US$99....but "foreigners" pay US$139!! Both prices exclude shipping - which
- for the foreigner will be about US$25-45....depending on the method.
-
- My point is that the foriegner who earns half as much is expected to pay 40%
- more! This is a frequent problem. It also invites software piracy on a massive
- scale because *all* software is too expensive for the average New Zealand
- computer user.
-
- All of it. Even MS Works cost NZ$350 plus 12.5% sales tax.
-
- Companies that want to avoid piracy will price the products at a reasonable
- level. Especially in overseas markets where incomes are generally lower. In NZ
- people often figure piracy is OK because they were getting ripped off on the
- price anyway....so they are getting their own back on gouging vendors.
-
- Doesn't make it right. It just explains why it happens and will continue to
- happen.
-
- Steve
- --
- Steve Withers - Wellington, New Zealand | On Sept. 19th, 88% of NZ voters opted
- Steve.Withers@bbs.actrix.gen.nz | for proportional representation. It
- +64 4 478 4714 | looks like we may get a more
- **** Happy user of OS/2 v2!! **** | democratic system "real soon now".
-