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Jeff, just to play the devil's advocate here, and I DO NOT support piracy in any way, shape or form, it is especially criminal at large places that can afford it and choose to steal to help their bottom line, but doesnt the responsibility to protect the software lie with the developer? Hear me out. If you have a $2,000 bike wouldnt you put a lock on it when you go inside? Sure, theres no lock in the world that is 100% theft proof, but there are locks that are extremely difficult to break and will reasonably protect your investment. My tech knowledge of these things are pretty low, but if your software is so good everyone wants to steal it, maybe look into hardware dongles, better encryption, etc? If it is too hard to crack people will just give up and buy it? Right? Maybe?
On Friday, August 23, 2013, Jeff Krebs wrote:
hmm we see number 10 as are biggest issue. 1 or 2 major studios per day are reported to us.
This is not an individual trying out some software - These hundreds of licenses per studio per day.
-- Animator & Editor www.teddygage.com
Brooklyn
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