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Dev.SN ♥ developers

posted by janrinok on Friday March 21 2014, @10:37PM   Printer-friendly
from the questions-without-answers dept.

AnonTechie writes:

"Echoing a question asked on programmers.stackexchange.com - How can software be protected from piracy ?

It just seems a little hard to believe that with all of our technological advances and the billions of dollars spent on engineering the most unbelievable and mind-blowing software, we still have no other means of protecting against piracy than a "serial number/activation key." I'm sure a ton of money, maybe even billions, went into creating Windows 7 or Office and even Snow Leopard, yet I can get it for free in less than 20 minutes. Same for all of Adobe's products, which are probably the easiest. Can there exist a fool-proof and hack-proof method of protecting your software against piracy? If not realistically, could it be theoretically possible? Or no matter what mechanisms these companies deploy, can hackers always find a way around it ?"

 
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  • (Score: 1) by SuperCharlie on Saturday March 22 2014, @12:24PM

    by SuperCharlie (2939) on Saturday March 22 2014, @12:24PM (#19734)

    This was also my first thought. It is also one of the things I would never buy since even the mighty Google has good/great SaaS they regularly kill. The downside for this is it has to be sold as a subscription as you have ongoing server costs or priced with an EOL in mind which would throw in major costs upfront. In the scheme of things this is the only way to do it imho, and it still stinks :)