On Mar 16, 2013, at 12:00 PM, kee nethery <k...@kagi.com> wrote:

> The people who make a lot of money selling software are those that focus on 
> how to get more people to use their software, not those who focus on how to 
> get less people to use their software. 
> 
> The "get more people" group occasionally will "crack" their software and 
> upload that crack to a crack site so that people can steal their software. 
> Having a crack shows that someone cared enough about the software to spend 
> time to crack it because of the street cred that would give them. No one 
> cracks lame software thus … this software must not be lame. In addition, no 
> one wants to be the second person to crack some software so other cracks 
> don't appear.
> 
> Secondly, most people that pirate software don't really use it. And if they 
> do, you've just had someone experience your software and figure out what it 
> is good for. People like me who pay for software, ask for recommendations, 
> and I'm fairly certain that many of the recommendations come from people who 
> have pirated software. Pirates can be your advertising channel.
> 
> Finally, the crack if the pirate is still using the cracked software after 6 
> months, they can be converted into a buyer. It has some weird bug that pops 
> up. The solution to that specific bug is to buy the upgrade. If someone 
> running a cracked version gets that error message, they are using it for real 
> and they will frequently pay for the upgrade.
> 
> Kee Nethery

Wow! You really nailed it. I've read similar commentaries, but yours is clear 
and concise.

I'm working on a book, thinking about self-publishing, selling to the public 
from a website, while taking care to maintain control of the copyright, maybe 
going with a  commercial publisher later, if it's successful. I've feared 
piracy, heard both sides of the debate.

You've convinced me (unless someone later on this thread changes my mind).

With software, it seems, one way to limit piracy damage is to upgrade 
routinely. With literature, it might help to release periodic revisions, or 
regularly add new material.

Cheers,


Tim Miller


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