'Dead wrong' seems a bit harsh. How about 'wounded wrong'? My claim that companies don't set out to cheat vendors is naïve because I never experienced it. Touche. But I did not waffle on the long-term consequences of T&C violation even if inadvertent. You eventually have to pay regardless.
I stand by my example of PSF excession. How would it have been if our printers had stopped working in the middle of a 100K bill run at oh dark thirty on a Tuesday morning? What would that have done to our customer relationship with IBM? Yet we have had major business disruptions involving *other* vendors who see fit to shut down their products until someone negotiates a new contract. A lousy way to do business. . . J.O.Skip Robinson Southern California Edison Company Electric Dragon Team Paddler SHARE MVS Program Co-Manager 323-715-0595 Mobile 626-543-6132 Office ⇐=== NEW [email protected] -----Original Message----- From: IBM Mainframe Discussion List [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Ed Jaffe Sent: Wednesday, October 18, 2017 11:18 AM To: [email protected] Subject: (External):Re: Potential stupid question - MSUs On 10/18/2017 10:42 AM, Charles Mills wrote: > And yes, with the complexity of modern 'plexes and licenses, we have at my > current employer had customer, ahem, misunderstandings. And those "misunderstandings" have a mixed-bag of outcomes. Some customers understand the concept of fair play, but in many cases the biggest lawyers win. If, as Skip's company did (BTW, Skip is DEAD WRONG on this issue), you "accidentally" use unlicensed IBM software, you will pay -- no question about it because IBM's lawyers are as big or bigger than yours are *AND* they own the operating system on which your business depends. But, when the customer's lawyer is bigger than the ISV's lawyer, some have a tendency to say, "Hey, Man. It was an accident and it won't happen again. It's really your fault that your software doesn't enforce the contract T&Cs properly. BTW, could you now spend money on a project to build protections into your software to help us police this?" -- Phoenix Software International Edward E. Jaffe 831 Parkview Drive North El Segundo, CA 90245 http://www.phoenixsoftware.com/ ---------------------------------------------------------------------- For IBM-MAIN subscribe / signoff / archive access instructions, send email to [email protected] with the message: INFO IBM-MAIN
