Let’s face it. Software piracy has always been around since the days that people figured out they could copy 3.5″ floppy disks. With the advent and proliferation of the availability of the Internet, some will argue that is made software piracy even worse I myself have dabbled in parts of it too. Let’s dive a little bit into why people pirate software, when everyone knows from a moral standpoint it is just plain wrong.
I’m not going to repeat the poll answers, but have my own spin on it. Let’s face it. Software piracy is dead simple. It exists because:
- People don’t want to spend money when they can download it for free.
- People want to try before they buy (if they buy).
- People aren’t going to buy the software in the first place anyway, so downloading it is not really a loss to the company.
Of course, you can argue the other way too as to why you should not pirate software:
- Software developer’s lives depend on the funding from their software. If people download the software for free, there goes their job.
- Piracy stifles creativity. What is the point of making something badass when someone is going to download it for free and you get no credit for it?
- Software developers create anti-DRM methods that are so painful and ludicrous that sometimes the legin users are punished when the software is buggy. The pirates can make a “cracked” version of the software that runs better and faster than the original software.
So in a nutshell that is a very short glimmer of the argument on both sides for and against software piracy. For people with no money, its great. Or you get hackers or crackers that just like to prove to the software companies that they can crack their software for the hell of it.
Whether you know it or not, a lot of the software that you see at your local software store can be downloaded online, and made to work to bypass activation whether that is a modified executable file (called a crack), or through a serial key. Some software after entering in the serial key goes online to validate against the server, and if found black listed, the software will go back to its expired more.
However, some people are smart. They turn on the firewall and block the software from going online, hence they have “full version” software for eternity. Widget by Css Reflex | TutZone
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