I guess not... maybe this is because I'm now more paranoid thanks to all them 
hacks going around.

- Vignesh
Mainframe Infrastructure

-----Original Message-----
From: IBM Mainframe Discussion List [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf 
Of Timothy Sipples
Sent: 18 October 2017 10:10
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: Potential stupid question - MSUs

Vignesh Sankaranarayanan wrote:
>....but for some reason, I just can't fathom a vendor leaving the
>enforcement of a rule up to a customer, and letting the contract
>(something completely detached from the machine) be the only binding
>factor.

Is that so hard to imagine, though?

Let's suppose you rent an apartment, and you sign a lease. The lease contains 
certain terms and conditions. Those terms include, as possible
examples:

1. You cannot sublet (rent out) the apartment to someone else without the 
landlord's permission.

2. You cannot make major modifications to the apartment, such as paint the 
walls with alternating pink and black stripes.

3. You cannot start an open fire inside your apartment and roast marshmallows 
(or anything else).

4. You cannot keep a tiger, lion, elephant, or alligator in the apartment.

If you violate the terms of the lease, you face certain penalties, enforced 
through the courts (hopefully).

Does the landlord have video cameras installed the apartment, with 
round-the-clock surveillance, to make sure you are living up to your 
contractual obligations? No, usually not. In fact, in most jurisdictions, the 
landlord has only very limited rights to enter the apartment, under specific 
conditions that seldom apply.

Contracts routinely depend on the parties having "good faith," with voluntary 
compliance as the default behavior. This approach works especially well when 
the parties have an ongoing, mutually beneficial relationship of some kind. For 
example, software vendors and licensees typically have some sort of support and 
subscription agreement. There are also what are known as "due diligence" 
checks, before you do business with someone. A landlord might run a credit 
check before renting an apartment. A software vendor might check with Dun & 
Bradstreet or some other firm to verify creditworthiness. And vice versa.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Timothy Sipples
IT Architect Executive, Industry Solutions, IBM z Systems, AP/GCG/MEA
E-Mail: [email protected]

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