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by maxk42
4550 days ago
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You're only losing opportunity cost. Not COGS. Meanwhile, the user who is pirating your software might be someone for whom the price is prohibitive or who would otherwise not be a user at all if there weren't a cracked alternative. So the the loss to this "theft" is actually much lower because (1) there was no price associated with materials for the software -- it costs you the same to produce one copy as it does a million and (2) the majority of cracked copies of the software wouldn't have resulted in a sale anyway. |
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(2) I agree with. It doesn't matter what's best if your product doesn't sell. I think developers need publishing labels (read: app stores) to monetize. Users might pay not pay for note-keeping applet, but they might pay for a fork of it in their GitHub account that's been audited for security & privacy by a reputable publisher. Social P2P software can also be designed to exchange receipts of purchase on connection. Users would be able to disable it, but failing to publish a receipt for software would be awkward in business contexts.