ElDiabloConCaca
U.S.D.A. Prime
Valrus -- I admire your honesty and integrity!
That is pretty much the point I've been trying to make throughout this whole thread. People feel "justified" in pirating software because they think it's a "message" to the developers that their software is buggy and overpriced. Well, there's another way (a BETTER and more EFFECTIVE way) to send that same message, and that's exactly what your post embodies.
Adobe will get the clue that PhotoShop is overpriced (a statement I DON'T agree with -- it's an AMAZING program) when people start using shareware or free alternatives to accomplish the same tasks.
I used to pirate software as well -- until I started becoming a Computer Science major. I saw how tedious and how much work went into making a simple program like a program to roll a pair of dice! And all I got out of the course was an 'A' printed on a piece of paper and the hopes that one day it'll get me somewhere. Someone who can make a living doing that on a much more intricate and larger scale has my respect and admiration, and my money if I'm interested in what they write! I look and will continue to look down upon those who think that piracy is justified or not objectionable in that light -- or those who do pirate and refuse to even look at the situation from a different angle.
Piracy is theft. Just because you don't swipe a box of software doesn't mean you're doing anything less illegal or less objectionable. The boxes and manuals and CDs are the LEAST expensive part of the process -- it's the data on the CDs and the ingenuity and thought that went into that program... and whether you steal a box of software or copy it illegally from the internet, it's the priciple that you're getting something for free that you shouldn't.
Again, I respect and admire your honesty and integrity, and it's refreshing to hear from someone who has "seen the light" of piracy and decided against it for themself and what it does to software publishers.
That is pretty much the point I've been trying to make throughout this whole thread. People feel "justified" in pirating software because they think it's a "message" to the developers that their software is buggy and overpriced. Well, there's another way (a BETTER and more EFFECTIVE way) to send that same message, and that's exactly what your post embodies.
Adobe will get the clue that PhotoShop is overpriced (a statement I DON'T agree with -- it's an AMAZING program) when people start using shareware or free alternatives to accomplish the same tasks.
I used to pirate software as well -- until I started becoming a Computer Science major. I saw how tedious and how much work went into making a simple program like a program to roll a pair of dice! And all I got out of the course was an 'A' printed on a piece of paper and the hopes that one day it'll get me somewhere. Someone who can make a living doing that on a much more intricate and larger scale has my respect and admiration, and my money if I'm interested in what they write! I look and will continue to look down upon those who think that piracy is justified or not objectionable in that light -- or those who do pirate and refuse to even look at the situation from a different angle.
Piracy is theft. Just because you don't swipe a box of software doesn't mean you're doing anything less illegal or less objectionable. The boxes and manuals and CDs are the LEAST expensive part of the process -- it's the data on the CDs and the ingenuity and thought that went into that program... and whether you steal a box of software or copy it illegally from the internet, it's the priciple that you're getting something for free that you shouldn't.
Again, I respect and admire your honesty and integrity, and it's refreshing to hear from someone who has "seen the light" of piracy and decided against it for themself and what it does to software publishers.