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- >From: Greg Bruno <gregb@amazon.sandiegoca.ncr.com>
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- Date: Thu, 24 Dec 1992 10:32:44 -0800
- Sender: "CDROMLAN@IDBSU - Use of CDROM Products in Lan Environments"
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- From: gregb@AMAZON.SANDIEGO.NCR.COM
- Subject: Re: OED/Licensing
- Lines: 46
-
- > Jennifer Heise, writes:
-
- > The computer world is going to have to learn someday that the answer is not to
- > make things more difficult to copy, but make them easier to buy.
-
- Companies don't have the responsibility to make their products affordable.
- Successful companies adjust to the market, they aren't in it for charity.
-
- > When
- > academics were expected to cough up $500 for a piece of software, they could
- > not justify being honest and ripped-off (Microsoft ain't in danger of failing,
- > kids; neither is Ashton-Tate. Profits are being made.)
-
- I just the love the attitude of "academics good, corporations bad". Whose
- fault is it if you feel "ripped-off"?
-
- You cast a 'yes vote' every time you purchase something. If you don't like
- the product (poor quality, too expensive, etc.) you have the freedom not
- to buy it.
-
- > Fewer illegal copies
- > were made when cheaper "academic" versions came out; fewer still when site
- > licenses came out. I can justify paying $75 for my copy of Microsoft Word for
- > the Mac, but $450 is almost 1/3 the price of my computer-- and more expensive
- > than a cheap word processor.
- > One of the simple rules of intellectual property is that the price of
- > producing it is fixed, no matter how many copies there are made (plus a teeny
- > markup for copying & distribution). The more copies you sell, the cheaper the
- > per-copy production costs become. If more people will buy at a lower price,
- > you can work it out so that your profits are ABOUT the same.
-
- So what? Companies are in business to maximize profit, not volume. If a company
- can maximize its profit by offering a product at a lower price, then so
- be it. But where is it written that there is ceiling on a company's profit?
-
- > Plus, you can
- > charge high prices to interpret your cruddy documentation (see DBASE), and
- > make a bundle.
-
- > Libraries, however, are in an all-the-market-will-bear situation, since there
- > are a limited number of libraries, especially libraries with CD systems.
-
- In this hemisphere, it's known as the free market.
-
- Greg Bruno
- gregb@amazon.sandiegoca.ncr.com
-