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-- Ni Fm-8 - Holly Hawtness!!! Wow!!!!
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Hackers and crackers seem to cut right through any kind of anti-piracy scheme, I don't even know why these companies bother. The standard schemes that keep the common users honest are fine, but trying to stop the warez traders is pointless, and ends up punishing legitimate users.
I don't know what the solution is, but this FM8 thing seems to be overkill. I wonder how often the thing scans for illegal NI software. How much CPU and memory is that going to use up. Bloat it up baby! Punish me, I love it! 
1 word: Dongle.
hahahahahahahah.
I am going to sell all my NI software and use their warezed versions. Hah, take that NI.
Not much to sell though.
Since this thread went sideways for a moment, allow me to add some momentum to what has been already discussed. Here's case and point for piracy:
I work as IT consultant, doing systems administration and alike. Few days ago, a client of mine who has been running a certain backup software package on his servers decided to buy a license after evaluation ran out.
I needed to get him price quote for license. Unlike regular VSTi, with some software packages you have not just one license to buy, you have to buy several:
1. Main license
2. Licence for client access (CAL)
3. Agent licence (sub-license for feature of the program to do backups of specific programs)
4. Feature license (for program to do something it was meant to do but with a tape library - e.g. more than 1 tape)
5. Disaster recovery license - yet more features of the same program but done slightly differently
and on top of everything....
6. Upgrade(!!!) and support license for products (each sold separately)
None of this is documented in plain language anywhere, of course.
after all was said and done, we were looking at about $15,000 in licensing and support fees. And this is a "small business" product. I don't know too many small businesses that can afford a $15,000 backup software, but that's besides the point. What pissed me off that I tried calling the company for pricing and spent over 3 HOURS of my time, being tossed around phone queues, hold queues, and incompetent sales reps all over the globe. The answer itself took about 10 minutes.
The time I was holding, just out of experiment, I was searching for keygen for the program. I found a keygen that worked like magic in less than 15 minutes. So, what's the initiative here for the buyer to go legally? And company that's so cumbersome, inefficient in servicing the customers who WANT TO BUY THEIR PRODUCT deserves to have its product "stolen" e.g. "used illegaly". If customer was offering to pay me $15,000 - I'd make damn sure I was available with a pen and paper to take their oder.
The cherry on the cake was that all of the stuff I was ordering was simply pieces of paper with license key numbers written on them. Yet, somehow my shipping charges amounted to $87.. (I guess they haven't heard about PDF files.)
In case you're wondering, it was Symantec. Probably one of the worst and most criminal software companies that ever existed. If you don't believe Symantec themselves are responsible for at least few viruses and spaming operations you need to get your head checked.
Well said. The general contractor construction company I do webdesign for is looking into buying some licenses for Adobe Acrobat Professional. And I already warned them it was going to be very pricy.
I couldn't agree more with you EMC, can't wait to hear more on the FM8 rundown.
All "small business" products are a joke, there's not a small business in the world that can afford them.
But then again, you have to understand how these people think: a "small" business to them is anything between 1 and 5000 employees. I'm not kidding, all of the boneheaded consulting companies like KPMG use that specification, and of course that's what the software retailers base their licensing costs on. Call IBM about their "small business" servers and ask what exactly that means - you'll be [un]pleasantly surprised.
They honestly don't even seem to be aware that some businesses employ less than 50 people and have no more than a few million per year in revenue.
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