This is actually very true.Ilok should be held accountable for that in my humble opinion. They are charging a lot and not protecting the developer at all. NDSP JM for example was cracked day 1.
While this is true, there is a lot of grey area. You'll get the people who never crack, the people who always crack, and then the people in the middle who may or may not use a crack, depending on how they manage to justify it to themselves. A lot of those people would pay for the software, if the crack was not available to them. They'd possibly wait for a sale, a Black Friday deal, or whatever. But they would eventually buy it.People that use cracked software aren’t going to be paying customers anyway.
Keep doing your thing FAS. The people you truly care about your products reaching aren’t going to resort to piracy.![]()
As long as the car is also covered in aids and fire resistant dick chewing werewolves, then I am in agreement.Anyone using a cracked version of this I hope get caught in a car fire.
Not trying to excuse the practice in general but "somewhat negligible non-life changing price" very much depends on your living circumstances. In most of our sorry world the price of software like this amounts to a full monthly wage (or several) and it should appear obvious why piracy is a default choice for poor people.
Steam anti-piracy model works by recognizing this reality and scaling down the price considerably for less fortunate countries. From what I can tell it works very well for turning certain pirates into paying customers. Steam also provides other added values which award honest customers rather than punish them preemptively for the potential deeds of others.
This is a bit buzzwordy imo. NDSP plugins hadn’t been cracked for 4+ years and basically the day before mayerX came out the flood of cracks started rolling in.Ilok should be held accountable for that in my humble opinion. They are charging a lot and not protecting the developer at all. NDSP JM for example was cracked day 1.
Not really to be honest. All you need is a big enough team of Chinese or Russian coders, who reverse engineer the code and remove all of the protection; or they spoof servers locally, and intercept any messages from the plugin that calls any of the associated protections.There must be some conditions where ilok can and can’t be cracked.
This likely says more about supply and demand than it does about technical conditions.This is a bit buzzwordy imo. NDSP plugins hadn’t been cracked for 4+ years and basically the day before mayerX came out the flood of cracks started rolling in.
There must be some conditions where ilok can and can’t be cracked. Either way it sucks and I’d be fascinated to know if they offer some level of “insurance” if their protection doesn’t do its job.
I think this kind of thing happened with ilok v2 and then v3 shored up security until recently. It was so long ago I can’t really remember.
Sure, but it was actually cracked day one, even though the older ones were not. And I imagine that JMX was their biggest release.This is a bit buzzwordy imo. NDSP plugins hadn’t been cracked for 4+ years and basically the day before mayerX came out the flood of cracks started rolling in.
There must be some conditions where ilok can and can’t be cracked. Either way it sucks and I’d be fascinated to know if they offer some level of “insurance” if their protection doesn’t do its job.
As a software engineer myself, If i was developing a plugin in today's market, I would probably just use a basic auth code. I genuinely think ilok (cloud) hurts more than protects.Not really to be honest. All you need is a big enough team of Chinese or Russian coders, who reverse engineer the code and remove all of the protection; or they spoof servers locally, and intercept any messages from the plugin that calls any of the associated protections.
Idk, NDSP plugins are wildly popular. Unless you are saying people didn't care to crack until Mayer came out?This likely says more about supply and demand than it does about technical conditions.
I'd be interested if you expanded upon that.As a software engineer myself, If i was developing a plugin in today's market, I would probably just use a basic auth code. I genuinely think ilok (cloud) hurts more than protects.
Yeah it was cracked day1 but I still think the context that none of their stuff had been touched for 4 years prior is pretty big context. They all got cracked basically the day before the Mayer release. Would be a massive gut punch for a bunch of reasons.Sure, but it was actually cracked day one, even though the older ones were not. And I imagine that JMX was their biggest release.
I’m sure there are plenty of others besides UAD who haven’t been cracked but that could come down to technicality or just effort involved in doing it (Ie they can’t be bothered for whatever reason).Only one so far is UAD implementation. Every other implementation got cracked, AFAIK. I would actually think they could probably blame the developers for not "implementing well".
It’s my belief that if they had the ability to get it done, they would have. Something must have stopped them for a long time and they’ve now figured something out.Idk, NDSP plugins are wildly popular. Unless you are saying people didn't care to crack until Mayer came out?
Regardless, this doesn't seem right but who knows.
Or it has something to do w Ilock perhaps , an update or recent change to their design , that exposed a vulnerabilityIt’s my belief that if they had the ability to get it done, they would have. Something must have stopped them for a long time and they’ve now figured something out.
There's no excuse for pirating software. There are plenty of free or very cheap options available to make music. One doesn't need to steal, in order to do it.Not trying to excuse the practice in general but "somewhat negligible non-life changing price" very much depends on your living circumstances. In most of our sorry world the price of software like this amounts to a full monthly wage (or several) and it should appear obvious why piracy is a default choice for poor people.
Steam anti-piracy model works by recognizing this reality and scaling down the price considerably for less fortunate countries. From what I can tell it works very well for turning certain pirates into paying customers. Steam also provides other added values which award honest customers rather than punish them preemptively for the potential deeds of others.
Probably doesn't help they also just released a free trialOr it has something to do w Ilock perhaps , an update or recent change to their design , that exposed a vulnerability
I understand your point, because I'm from a shitty country. But to be completely honest, steam prices here for AAA games are basically the same price as USA, more or less. And I don't think it's fair either to lower prices for other countries, because the cost of developing software is the same anyway. But it could be a marketing strategy, so who knows..Not trying to excuse the practice in general but "somewhat negligible non-life changing price" very much depends on your living circumstances. In most of our sorry world the price of software like this amounts to a full monthly wage (or several) and it should appear obvious why piracy is a default choice for poor people.
Steam anti-piracy model works by recognizing this reality and scaling down the price considerably for less fortunate countries. From what I can tell it works very well for turning certain pirates into paying customers. Steam also provides other added values which award honest customers rather than punish them preemptively for the potential deeds of others.
This is a bit buzzwordy imo. NDSP plugins hadn’t been cracked for 4+ years and basically the day before mayerX came out the flood of cracks started rolling in.
There must be some conditions where ilok can and can’t be cracked. Either way it sucks and I’d be fascinated to know if they offer some level of “insurance” if their protection doesn’t do its job.
I think this kind of thing happened with ilok v2 and then v3 shored up security until recently. It was so long ago I can’t really remember.