I'll sell you my purebread horse, but you better not try to bread him.
Originally posted by: bookem dano
For the electiricity analogy to work, MS would be charging us per cycle on the CPU, or uptime.
Even the analogy on the one cdrom shared is flawed b/c that is against the MS EULA.
bits on a CDROM are physical....its a pit. what those pits represent is a function first done by hardware and then software. calling a bit non physical is like calling a drop of ink nonphysical. Both are part of something that needs some sort of interpretation.
XP supports multiple users, or multiple lightbulbs.
No one has tried to discuss without some analogy why the EULA for 1 installed PC is and should be legal. Software to me is a product. Like all products, it has a lifespan and a set price. Unlike most products, software's lifespan can be directly controlled by parent company via lack of support of the product. Also unlike most consumer products, the creating company has taken it upon themselves to make sure all of their product users use the product only as they intended it to be used. What basic principal says that this is and should be legal?
I'll sell you my purebread horse, but you better not try to bread him.
Thanks for not paying attention.
Originally posted by: velis
I'm sorry, Dano, that you feel this way. Since you're done totally disillusioned over anandtech communiti, I'll go at this one more time:
I believe your original question has been answered multiple times here. To be exact, you asked not one question, but quite a few:
1) Why is it legal for an ISV to limit a household to one install of SW?
2) Why is SW not consumable product
3) Why is there no 'household' license
4) How can a company prohibit me from using their SW in a particular way
First of all, this is quite a complicated issue as you could have seen from the replies taking various approaches to the subject.
I may have missed one or maybe two, but this is basically it. Since you asked a multiple-layered question, you can't expect each reply to contain answers to all your questions. You have been lucky to have your questions answered in multiple posts by multiple people, but you refused to read them and see how other people feel about those questions.
Let me summarise it by question to you again:
1) You asked the wrong question. It doesn't. You can always buy 2 licences
To interpret the question the way you meant it (Why can't i install one purchased copy to many computers): Because ISV only gives you the right to install it on one. They have every right to do that. They wrote the SW after all and can do anything they want with it, can't they? If you don't like their license, don't use the SW.
2) Because the installation CD doesn't disintegrate after installation. So doesn't the disk after n arbitrary types of use of the SW. There are millions of reasons why it is not and only a few that suggest SW could be consumable.
3) Because ISV feels it would make it more trouble than good. Otherwise every ISV would have one.
4) Well, this one is really tricky. You were talking about viewing pornography in one particular viewer. This particular constraint may have come from ISV trying to protect themselves against being mentioned in some huge porn scandal with paedophiles or something like that. But on general I believe that's one thing they can't do. I could be using the SW for all kinds of legal or illegal activity, that's mine to determine, not the ISV's. But still, see (1) for explanation why they can do it, as long as it doesn't violate some law about your freedom to use your property (license in this case) in any way you seem fit.
Originally posted by: bookem dano
Originally posted by: velis
I'm sorry, Dano, that you feel this way. Since you're done totally disillusioned over anandtech communiti, I'll go at this one more time:
I believe your original question has been answered multiple times here. To be exact, you asked not one question, but quite a few:
1) Why is it legal for an ISV to limit a household to one install of SW?
2) Why is SW not consumable product
3) Why is there no 'household' license
4) How can a company prohibit me from using their SW in a particular way
First of all, this is quite a complicated issue as you could have seen from the replies taking various approaches to the subject.
I may have missed one or maybe two, but this is basically it. Since you asked a multiple-layered question, you can't expect each reply to contain answers to all your questions. You have been lucky to have your questions answered in multiple posts by multiple people, but you refused to read them and see how other people feel about those questions.
Let me summarise it by question to you again:
1) You asked the wrong question. It doesn't. You can always buy 2 licences
To interpret the question the way you meant it (Why can't i install one purchased copy to many computers): Because ISV only gives you the right to install it on one. They have every right to do that. They wrote the SW after all and can do anything they want with it, can't they? If you don't like their license, don't use the SW.
2) Because the installation CD doesn't disintegrate after installation. So doesn't the disk after n arbitrary types of use of the SW. There are millions of reasons why it is not and only a few that suggest SW could be consumable.
3) Because ISV feels it would make it more trouble than good. Otherwise every ISV would have one.
4) Well, this one is really tricky. You were talking about viewing pornography in one particular viewer. This particular constraint may have come from ISV trying to protect themselves against being mentioned in some huge porn scandal with paedophiles or something like that. But on general I believe that's one thing they can't do. I could be using the SW for all kinds of legal or illegal activity, that's mine to determine, not the ISV's. But still, see (1) for explanation why they can do it, as long as it doesn't violate some law about your freedom to use your property (license in this case) in any way you seem fit.
thanks for the recap, but even your recap shows people don't listen.
I have read peoples comments, and usually reply with how their comments didn't address the real question or was backed up by a faulty analogy.
I'll attempt at an answer...
1)
I ask how is it legal for an ISV to limit a household to 1 install.
The only reply I get is, because they can. This really doesn't tell me how/why it is illegal. People SAY it is b/c SW is not a consumable product, yet I have argued that it is consumable and as such it should be bound by the normal principles of a consumable product. Basically I fail to understand how the compiled code is this somewhat special/magical thing that the company has the authority to attempt to control with an iron fist.
2) SW is consumable. Windows 95, Dos, Windows 3.1, Windows 98, and soon to be Windows 2000 have all ben consumed by not being supported. Just b/c the transfer medium may have a longer shelf life than the vitual product, doesn't mean the purchased item as a whole is not consumable.(Note, I'm arguing the consumability of an OS which is different than the consumability of another product)
3) I would assume there is no license for household so that they can squeeze out more money from the consumer, but that doesn't make it right.
4)This is tricky. You even agree that they cannot prohibit the use of the product, but then fall back on the argument, of they can b/c they've been doing it for years/because they can. And that is the very thing I'm questioning.
Bottom line...
MS owns the source code. As a private consumer of their compiled product there should be no company enforceable restriction on how I can use that product. I cannot however take that product and sell it as my own.
This is why I believe they started the idea of SW licensing, to protect the work of others. I'm all for that. Like I've said before, I'm actually a software developer and nothing makes me angrier than someone that steals your work for their own gain. If I use that other persons work and incorporate it into my own products that is wrong unless I have their permission. That permission usually would be in form of a licensing agreement. That's why I believe that businesses fall into the license area b/c the business' overall product has incorporated the SW. So perhaps my real question is, why does a license exist for home/private use?