Author: Enrique Irazoqui
Date: 12:45:55 07/21/98
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On July 21, 1998 at 12:35:20, Peter Klausler wrote: >On July 20, 1998 at 13:40:55, Enrique Irazoqui wrote: >>The example I gave before: I am sure many of us use the same operating system >>running on several computers. How many of us bought a copy of this operating >>system for every computer we have? I guess few of us or even no one. Does this >>make thieves (your expression) out of all of us? > >1) You can't justify your theft by claiming that it's common. All my software is legal. All my chess software is so legal that was sent to me by the manufacturers themselves. No theft involved of any kind, thank you very much. The example I gave had to do with using the same copy of an operating system on several computers I have (also legal=bought). Enrique >2) All of my software is legal. I'm not a thief. >3) Stealing chess software is particularly crass in the face of > so much useful freeware for chess. A chess software thief > can't even use the lame argument that he can't afford the > software that he "needs". Download Crafty, Winboard, and > CDB and quit whining. >4) Nobody needs to play chess. One might argue that stealing > food to feed a starving child is justifiable, but stealing > software to support a hobby is without any excuse. >5) If there's something you want your computer to do, and you > can't afford to buy the software that does it, get a free > compiler and write it yourself. If you can't do that, > learn how. Besides being criminal, software theft is a > sign of laziness. > >Violation of a software license is theft, plain and simple and >no more justifiable than theft of computer hardware. Run freeware >or write it if you can't buy what you want. And have some more >respect for those of us who create this stuff.
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