I don't condone the piracy but the price Microsoft charge for the product invites it.
Or all the sleeze bags who rip it off cause the price for honest citizens to increase. As a registered owner of MS Office and absolutely no pirated software (even own a legit copy of Photoshop) I have two hints:
1. Office is a professional grade software suite. You pay a premium for the best.
2. There are alternatives with basic funcationality for cheap (e.g. Works); and even free suites (e.g. OpenOffice).
The only thing INVITING piracy is people's self indulged sense of worth where they believe they have a right to anything they want if they can get away with it, regardless of the work, rights, and ownership of another.
Same with me. I know people who get the Office disc from work and install it at home. Given the cost of Office, and the fact everyone seems to use it, there must be a lot of piracy going on. $hundreds for Office does siirke me as utterly overpriced
See above. Considering the amount of R&D that goes into Office, and the fact no one is making you buy a copy, you really don't have a place to complain. If that wasn't enough, if you price out other professional suites of applications (and past competitive history in the market) I think you would realize that for the actual product/features it is not as absurd sa you suggest.
If you want something cheaper get Works or another remedial suite -- that has all the core functionality. Or use Wordpad or Notepad, etc... And as of the last couple years there is absolutely no excuse per the existance of OpenOffice which offers competitive features and functionality for free.
Though having heard the latest from MS regards Vista, like all this insane DRMness I find it hard to be against software piracy when law-abiding citizens are being treated as criminals. If they're going to treat us as criminals, may as well act like them, no?
And yet invasive DRM doesn't prevent people from getting excited about BR or HD DVD.
I am not a fan of DRM, and especially hate what companies like Adobe do to honest owners (and yet seem to wink at thiefs), but as the above reasoning indicates, what do you do? High and morally mighty peeps, with a sense of entitlement, rip your software off to "prove a point" because they think it is too expensive and they have a right to own and use your product for free.
Ironically, and more relevant to this forum, I have not heard anyone (but me!) say they feel like a criminal for DRM... but that was in relation to HD media formats. I can say that to this point the only software maker who even gets close to how Sony/Toshiba's HD media is Adobe.
Funny how people look at it, based on product/company. I have always taken the consumer stance: If it is overpriced I won't buy it; if I don't like the usage agreement I won't buy it (the only reason I have Photoshop is due to work requirements). Hence the reason sitting out on HD Media: Portable media standards not locked to a optical format are the future and after investing in DVDs I see no need to invest in HD DVD/BR and then in "Platform free Media" in the future, especially when I see the expense of HD media platforms and the restrictions they place on honest consumers.
But the fact is people DO steal their product and to protect themselves they charge more and impliment methods that begin alienating consumers. HD media is definately at that point; thus far I cannot say the same for MS seeing as people are throwing around 40% rates for thefted software. And outside of installation I have had no issues with MS products in regards to ownership/registration.
We will see in Vista comes and what makes it out the door (see laxed ICT standards on HD media), but I could imagine the outcry if the shoe was on the other foot. The difference of course is that at least people are admitting a massive, consumer level, theft of software (whereas video media doesn't seem to be as routinely pirated at such rates at the consumer level).