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- Newsgroups: comp.sys.mac.programmer
- Path: sparky!uunet!cs.utexas.edu!wupost!gumby!kzoo!k044477
- From: k044477@hobbes.kzoo.edu (Jamie R. McCarthy)
- Subject: Re: protection == !piracy
- Message-ID: <1993Jan7.223316.10564@hobbes.kzoo.edu>
- Organization: Kalamazoo College
- References: <1993Jan6.202441.19979@cs.cornell.edu> <C0GMst.3LB@news.udel.edu> <1ii4ndINNk43@skeena.ucs.ubc.ca>
- Date: Thu, 7 Jan 1993 22:33:16 GMT
- Lines: 36
-
- sainaney@unixg.ubc.ca (Narayan R. Sainaney) writes:
- >
- > The working copy will hold serial numberS (about 150 that I can trace
- >directly to you and they would be located at various places in the code,
- >resources etc).
- >
- > Now the big question: I do come across a copy of the program
- >that has been pirated. Being a small compnay with limited finances
- >(and lawyer support), fow far can I prosecute(sp?) someone? Would borders
- >affect the case (I'm up here in Canada) and to what degree?
-
- While I'm not a lawyer, I imagine prosecution would be expensive and
- time-consuming. Maybe if you rang up the SPA, they could harass the
- perpetrators with a few phone calls, but they'd probably also be
- unwilling to take it further. (Unless your name is Gates or Sculley.)
-
- You might consider another form of punishment: publish the names of
- known offenders in subsequent releases of the program. That is, in your
- About box for version 1.0.1, list the people who you know gave away
- copies of version 1.0.
-
- Of course, if you do this, explain the whole thing to people when they
- buy the program, so there are no surprises. And, for your sake, be
- certain you don't finger anyone incorrectly.
-
-
- My two cents: the best anti-piracy technique I've heard of is to
- provide a "Save Demo App As..." menu item, that saves a demo version of
- the app. That way, legitimate users can satisfy their friends who ask,
- "hey, can I borrow a copy of that program, just to see how it works?"
- That's where a lot of (non-game-program) piracy comes from, IMHO.
- --
- Jamie McCarthy Internet: k044477@kzoo.edu AppleLink: j.mccarthy
- "Estimated number of DOS viruses in existence today: 1,500
- Number of Macintosh-based viruses: Less than 40
- New DOS viruses discovered in summer '92: More than 100" - ComputerWorld
-