No doubt software companies have lost out on sales because of piracy, but stretching this to US$53 million, the retail value of estimated pirated copies of software, is optimistic accounting.
Is optimistic accounting the same thing as bullshyte?
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No doubt software companies have lost out on sales because of piracy, but stretching this to US$53 million, the retail value of estimated pirated copies of software, is optimistic accounting.
JoSorc said:I understand the point but if you can't afford it can't ****ing have it. Huh?
but thats just the thing with software, if you can't afford it, you actually can ****ing have it.![]()
well then...
For a couple of years I used a hacked version of Kaspersky Internet Security which I got from Romania until they woke up and found like 100k people using the same keyand stopped us from getting updates.
As I was very impressed with it, I went out and bought the disk locally and became legal! Well well, the LEGAL version works worse than the pirated one!! It slows my PC down to a grinding halt when it scans (and I have a top of the range PC) Try and get assistance from their office in Johannesburg and you might as well give up! They are USELESS! PLUS the little application that they insist you download and run to get your full system info before they will even look at helping you gets BLOCKED by their own software as containing malware!! Can you believe this crap?
The problem is price!
Software is priced for the USA and the EU where people earn 10x or more than we do here...not fair on us!
Salary in the UK ÂŁ 6200 = R 77500 Office retail @ R 4500 = 5.8% of salary
Same salary in SA = R 18000 Office retail @ R 4500 = 25% of salary
no brainer for the piracy
Was given the pricing for VS 2010 yesterday.
Pro - $1119
Premuim - $4500
Team - $11,500
Small development companies will be hurt a lot by this.
I believe piracy actually helps big software companies in the long term. Many youngsters who pirate software they cannot afford eventually go into business using the software legitimately.
If adobe implemented foolproof anti-piracy today, what is the chance of GIMP eventually taking over? Same with office & openoffice.
You clearly don't operate in the graphics industry. Try between R 20k - R80k+ for single user software licenses from Adobe and Autodesk. Sorry, open source video, 3d and other media apps just don't do the job. In the graphics industry, if your competitor uses pirate products, it's a HUGE advantage. Add some decent spec hardware and you're making a huge loss before you've even started...
Hehe, I'm quite aware of how much graphics software costs but it's not my field so would rather not comment on itIt's only the metro's who use it anyway, most IT like a plain old white page
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Is there no Opensource or alternative software Package you can consider beside's MS's Bloatware?
but thats just the thing with software, if you can't afford it, you actually can ****ing have it.![]()
You clearly don't operate in the graphics industry. Try between R 20k - R80k+ for single user software licenses from Adobe and Autodesk. Sorry, open source video, 3d and other media apps just don't do the job. In the graphics industry, if your competitor uses pirate products, it's a HUGE advantage. Add some decent spec hardware and you're making a huge loss before you've even started...
And best of all, it costs the copyright holder NOTHING if someone pirates it! Since he isn't depriving anyone of a copy by for example shoplifting it, 'piracy' falls under a different paradigm. Google the Wiki for the history of Copyright.
People who complain about piracy are just jealous someone is using their things for free. Often, those users are collectors who have so much warez and so little know-how it's impossible for them to even make use of all that software.
I also found that interesting- such a precise number. Probably an 'educated' thumb suck based on... well, who knows!
But they are deprived of the right to decide who can use their intellectual property.
That is true, but that is an intangible concept. It's not like a grocer whose shop is shoplifted or a bank which gets robbed. Maybe it hurts their feelings or makes them upset but so does a person who cuts in front of them in traffic.
@PeterCH - I don't get your argument... or am I getting you wrong?
Are you saying that if one person in the world bought a piece of software and everybody else copied it, the software company wouldn't lose revenue?
You can be guaranteed that next time the price will go up for the poor sod that actually wants to buy the legit copy. Sure, increasing the price is a failed strategy - the guy who wants to be legal loses out, the guys who write the software lose out, and the only people who benefit are the pirates.
Which is why, as long as I buy legal software, piracy indirectly screws me over.