copy protection
jurgen.defurne at philips.com
jurgen.defurne at philips.com
Wed Oct 18 02:28:58 EDT 2000
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Wed Oct 18 02:28:58 EDT 2000
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Or on multi-user machines. I have seen such a bookkeeping program. We swapped CPU's a few times (I'm talking about mini's here, with proprietary CPU's), and we had to call to software company. A small program encoded the configuration in a key, and upon delivery of that key, we got a new code to make the program run again. Jurgen josh at open.com@SMTP at python.org on 18/10/2000 06:32:19 Sent by: python-list-admin at python.org To: python-list at python.org@SMTP cc: Subject: Re: copy protection Classification: Well, given that he's talking about *porting* their app, I would say that their entire client base would be that stupid. Licensing code to a particular machine is actually quite common, especially for expensive software. Using the network adapter ID or other unique identifiers is no big deal. I'm sure that if they need to move to another machine, it is probably just a phone call or an email to get a new key. -- josh -----= Posted via Newsfeeds.Com, Uncensored Usenet News =----- http://www.newsfeeds.com - The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! -----== Over 80,000 Newsgroups - 16 Different Servers! =----- -- http://www.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
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