MrAnon
Chieftain
Hmm....not trying to toss gas on the hot coals here, but isn't that a bit of a stretch to go from a no-cd crack to piracy? A no-cd is a modification to the executable to make the program think that the CD is in the drive. Is it a violation of the EULA? Absolutely. Is it piracy? No, because copies of the game are not being distributed. It's not even a crime because a EULA violation is a civil matter, not a criminal one.
Leaving aside for the moment the methodology, how is a no-cd crack morally different from using a virtual drive? As long as you own a legit, legal copy of the program how are you committing piracy either way? What harm are you doing to the developer, et al, by using any method to avoid having to swap the CD in and out as long as you bought the program righteously? Is there an ethical difference between making a legal backup copy of your game (and playing from the backup instead of the original) and using a no-cd?
Moving to abandonware for a moment.... There IS such an animal. Some copyrights were owned by the company, not a person so that when the company goes under, no one owns the rights. Some programs were not copyrighted. Some programs have had the copyrights expire and not be renewed. Some copyright owners have chosen not to defend their copyright (and copyrights require an affirmative defense to accrue legal protection). Those products qualify as true 'abandonware' and are in the public domain.
Which is not even to say that some "abandonware" sites don't push the limits and I have run across one or two that fly a Jolly Roger over their "abandoned" sign. As one poster said in a discussion on this topic many moons ago: "Nothing is stopping you from dropping a check in the mail to the developer. Assuming you can find him, that is."
Leaving aside for the moment the methodology, how is a no-cd crack morally different from using a virtual drive? As long as you own a legit, legal copy of the program how are you committing piracy either way? What harm are you doing to the developer, et al, by using any method to avoid having to swap the CD in and out as long as you bought the program righteously? Is there an ethical difference between making a legal backup copy of your game (and playing from the backup instead of the original) and using a no-cd?
Moving to abandonware for a moment.... There IS such an animal. Some copyrights were owned by the company, not a person so that when the company goes under, no one owns the rights. Some programs were not copyrighted. Some programs have had the copyrights expire and not be renewed. Some copyright owners have chosen not to defend their copyright (and copyrights require an affirmative defense to accrue legal protection). Those products qualify as true 'abandonware' and are in the public domain.
Which is not even to say that some "abandonware" sites don't push the limits and I have run across one or two that fly a Jolly Roger over their "abandoned" sign. As one poster said in a discussion on this topic many moons ago: "Nothing is stopping you from dropping a check in the mail to the developer. Assuming you can find him, that is."