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- Xref: sparky comp.sys.amiga.programmer:17765 comp.sys.amiga.hardware:22023
- Newsgroups: comp.sys.amiga.programmer,comp.sys.amiga.hardware
- Path: sparky!uunet!wupost!cs.utexas.edu!torn!utgpu!engb
- From: engb@gpu.utcs.utoronto.ca (Ben Eng)
- Subject: Re: Attn Commodore: You are making a Big Mistake (Hardware
- Message-ID: <BzqqyC.M1o@gpu.utcs.utoronto.ca>
- Organization: Jet Penguin Lavatories
- References: <38039@cbmvax.commodore.com> <38m5VB4w165w@lakes.trenton.sc.us> <38111@cbmvax.commodore.com>
- Date: Thu, 24 Dec 1992 02:01:23 GMT
- Lines: 45
-
- In <38111@cbmvax.commodore.com> andy@cbmvax.commodore.com (Andy Finkel) writes:
-
- >In article <38m5VB4w165w@lakes.trenton.sc.us> rock@lakes.trenton.sc.us (Rockerboy) writes:
-
- >>Oh, foul! Copy protection is deliberate exploitation of nonstandard
- >>system eccentricities to make it difficult for people to copy the
- >>software. By definition, it is hardware hacking!
-
- >Not foul in context; you were 'wondering' why certain otherwise OS
- >compatible games broke on newer versions of the hardware or software...
- >the answer is the copy protection, which is not OS compatible.
-
- >You are right, though, copy protection is usually hardware hacking.
-
- So why doesn't the Amiga have an OS friendly method of copy
- protection? Give every Amiga a unique serial number implemented
- in hardware. Just like every workstation has a unique hostid.
- That would allow software vendors to provide software that is
- tied to that hostid or multiple hostids.
-
- Some people complain that this prevents them from chucking their
- hardware and moving their software to a newer machine, but I have
- found that the turnaround time that is necessary to obtain a brand
- new license key from every Unix software vendors that I have dealt
- with has been less than half an hour, especially if you have a FAX
- machine.
-
- For legitimate owners of commercial software there should not be
- much resistance to this type of copy protection. It sure beats
- being chained to your floppy disks or a funny decoder wheel, or
- a piece of paper with strange symbols, or a book full of phrases
- that need to be typed in at the start of every session. Of course,
- it is not foolproof, but nothing is. It is effective though.
-
- The only problem is that for Commodore to do so would offend the
- target market and it would hurt their hardware sales. Since they
- are not really in the software business their political powers
- that be can't really be expected to care about that benefit it
- could bring to their third party software vendors.
-
- Ben
- --
- e-mail: engb@gpu.utcs.utoronto.ca or ben@jetpen.gts.org (Ben Eng)
- UofT EngSci 9T2 ``We are all masochists here.''
- Home: (416)-979-8761, (416)-979-7885
-