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Protecting a program
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De
12/05/2013 19:13:13
 
 
À
12/05/2013 12:38:19
Information générale
Forum:
Visual FoxPro
Catégorie:
Autre
Divers
Thread ID:
01573606
Message ID:
01573646
Vues:
88
Viv

That's true. Not many pirated copies of SAP out there.


>>>>But which warrants the most stringent protection ? I'd argue the fifty dollar one....
>>
>>Viv... yes there might be a lot more users of the fifty dollar version and therefore a lot more to lose, but my experience (not with games, music, etc) has been most people's consciences expand inversely with the price of the product.
>>Most people I know paid for pkzip, for example, when it was easy to avoid paying for it. It was easy to be honest,
>>
>>On the other hand if I had ten bucks for every pirated copy of VFP or VS I'd retire to Bermuda and think big thoughts.
>
>In my experience the type of purchaser who spends big bucks on a piece of software tends to be corporations who have pretty strict rules on license compliance. And are also unlikely to pass it on to competitors :-}
>
>Conversely, rightly or wrongly, a lot of people are happy to give a copy of a low value product to friends etc...
>
>
>>>>>I have a little program I'd like to try and sell. I am interested in having a 'key' or some method to stop it being passed from person to person without receiving payment. What is the best way to do this?
>>>>
>>>>Grady
>>>>There are books written on this subject.
>>>>Here are a couple of thoughts:
>>>>-Do you want to sell it to a person or to a company? If it's to company, the company might want to buy a company license that allows anyone in the company to use it.
>>>>
>>>>-If it's to an individual, do you want to restrict the use to one machine or do you want the individual to be able to use it on many machines?
>>>>
>>>>-How much will it cost? Protecting software costing several thousand dollars merits different measures than you'd use to protect something costing fifty dollars.
>>>
>>>But which warrants the most stringent protection ? I'd argue the fifty dollar one....
>>>
>>>>
>>>>-How wide will its appeal be? If your software assists in the diagnosis of rare diseases in tropical fish, it's not likely that it will be copied very often but if it's a popular game, it might be.
Anyone who does not go overboard- deserves to.
Malcolm Forbes, Sr.
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