533
votes

So, after 6 months of hard work finally released my application. Today I found the first web site where people download it cracked, and I was wondering if any of you fellow programmers know how to react to such stuff?

Is there anything the software author can do to get the cracked version offline, or I'm just boned and shouldn't create anymore software, but just work on client's projects? What's your advice? Anybody with experience in that?

edit: programming is what I do- so no question about whether or not continuing, just is that clients pay per project in real money, and I still don't know if indie development would pay at least for the time invested, and now with the cracked download I'm trying to evaluate what to do, and if there's way to react

post discussion: As I see how much interest this question generated I'd say even if not purely programming topic the community needed to say what they think. And I'd say this page became a very good read for any programmer interested in the topic.

30
  • 384
    If it's not cracked, it means nobody wants your application.
    – DevinB
    Aug 23, 2010 at 18:33
  • 131
    If someone cares enough to pirate your software... that's a good thing :) Aug 23, 2010 at 18:33
  • 11
    StackOverflow isn't the best place to ask legal questions. There are a number of law firms (and copyright enforcement organizations) out there that specialize on this issue. You should consult them. On a separate note, if you're willing to give up software development just because someone is using your software for free, then maybe you're in the wrong profession. Aug 23, 2010 at 18:42
  • 36
    Hi Lese. You are right SO is not a legal site. But as an indie developer who can't afford legal fees you should understand I'm only asking for fellow devs' opinion for free - being everything I can afford... Aug 23, 2010 at 18:46
  • 92
    url to the cracked version pls ;)
    – ansiart
    Aug 23, 2010 at 19:34

48 Answers 48

466
votes

Ok, I've been selling software online for almost 10 years. I have had several products marketed to both individuals and businesses.

I am always shocked when I see developers are happy that someone thought their software was worth stealing. I mean, didn't you already know that? Why else would you spend time creating it if you didn't think it was worth anything?

I'd wager you would not say, "Wow, I had some great stuff and feel honored someone went to all the trouble of taking it." if someone broke into your house and stole your property. Stealing is stealing no matter if it is a Porsche 911 turbo, music, software or a pack of gum.

There is also another popular myth that pirated versions do not impact sales. I have done a few different experiments myself and also have friends in the industry that have seen significant revenue impacts due to piracy.

In fact, I had one product that I could always tell when it was keygen'd because sales would immediately dive as much as 70%. I was using partial key verification, and when I updated the verification to make the bogus codes stop working sales immediately went back to normal. I assume you would call thousands of dollars a month a significant impact on sales?

In one experiment I used the partial key verification to redirect customers who entered a pirated key to a special web page that explained they were stealing.

Guess what? Over 50% of people who went to that page bought the software. That almost brought sales back to pre-keygen levels.

Those people would have stolen the software if the code would have worked for them. This is a product with a fully functional 30 day trial, so they had already fully tested the software. Also, the product was under $20 USD, so it wasn't an expensive one.

Other people I know have tried the redirect bogus codes to a web page technique with similar (and sometimes significantly better) results.

I do agree that some people will never buy your software, and you have to balance protecting unauthorized use and inconveniencing honest customers.

But don't be fooled into thinking piracy isn't a big problem and not worth investing a reasonable amount of effort to prevent. People aren't as honest as most of us would like to think.

Update

First I want to say, as I stated in my comment below, I am not going to get into an argument or debate about this--especially one based on semantics. I have debated this for years in person, at conferences, and in private forums. I've heard all the arguments before.

Now I will try to answer some of the constructive questions.

I tried my own experiment on two different products.

One was an Outlook add-in to manage various hidden security settings. It was purchased by both individuals and companies. The numbers above are for that product.

I also did another experiment on a business targeted product that translated database schemas to various formats. This product had slightly less (around 10% less, so 40%) conversion from the page I redirected the bogus keys to.

I also am aware of several business owners that did the same experiment and discussed the results with me in private. These were a wide range of products. Some had a vertical market and some were very horizontal. Their conversion rate on the bogus key page was between 20% and 70%. Even at the low end that's a significant amount of extra revenue.

38
  • 31
    Great answer; interesting stories about your sales & techniques you used to battle piracy. Aug 23, 2010 at 23:24
  • 59
    I suspect the impact/effect of piracy varies from market to market. And in certain software markets, piracy can certainly hurt sales. But music is one area where piracy generally helps more than it hurts. I say generally because in music there are artists too for whom piracy has a negative impact. These are generally mainstream pop artists who rely heavily on the sales of hit singles to the 13-18yo crowd. With software, it will depend on your target demographic as well. And it's silly to compare breaking-and-entering and theft of property to illegal duplication/usage of your IP. Aug 24, 2010 at 2:41
  • 30
    There are obviously two camps here, and I am not going to get into an argument about it. I said what I think, and there is no doubt I have made a lot more money using a reasonable DRM to counter piracy than ignoring it. I have hard data to prove it, not speculation. As far as the what is and what is not stealing, well that's an ethical decision each individual has to make for themselves. I'm not here to right anyone's moral compass.
    – TWA
    Aug 24, 2010 at 4:11
  • 47
    It's not. Bloody. Stealing. It's not an ethical decision, it's not a moral question, it's in the bloody dictionary. All my empathy for your cause instantly goes away when you twist words like that. That aside, I'd like some more info on your app and on the market you were selling it in. Aug 24, 2010 at 21:29
  • 58
    Copying is not stealing no matter if it is copying a Porsche 911 turbo, music, software or a pack of gum. It might be copyright infringement though, which is also illegal. Conflating copying with stealing is intellectual dishonesty. Aug 25, 2010 at 8:14
291
votes

You may want to add something like this: alt text

20
  • 63
    Wow, that's great. Do you have any evidence of whether people really read all that text or just press the button?
    – sharptooth
    Aug 24, 2010 at 5:07
  • 48
    Maybe if they removed the word "hacker" I would have bought their software. But now they lost my vote... Aug 24, 2010 at 8:20
  • 48
    And how did you get that box to come up? ;D
    – Ed Daniel
    Aug 24, 2010 at 9:37
  • 28
    True ... my field tests show users absolutely don't read message boxes especially if there's only 1 button - because whatever the text says there's only 1 choice ... Actually most of them don't read text even if there's 2 buttons - they just click one of them Aug 24, 2010 at 9:51
  • 163
    should be a text box that you need to type "Shame on me" to continue Aug 24, 2010 at 18:03
145
votes

If someone thought your product was good enough to be worth their time to crack it, you must be doing something right. Remember that there are more honest people in the world than dishonest and you won't get the dishonest people to buy your product whatever you do. So concentrate on keeping your honest customers happy.

45
  • 41
    +1 pure for the "concentrate on keeping your honest customers happy" half the time DRM makes sofware harder and more annoying to use for people who payed for it then the people who cracked.
    – Pim Jager
    Aug 23, 2010 at 18:54
  • 251
    Remember that there are more honest people in the world than dishonest -- [citation needed]
    – Michael Myers
    Aug 23, 2010 at 18:55
  • 41
    @Jon B: It's not the same. When someone orders food in a restaurant and leaves without paying, the restaurant incurs a financial loss. In the case of cracks, it's "just" the loss of a sales prospect. It certainly is sad, but as long as you have enough honest customers it will not bring your business down. Aug 23, 2010 at 18:58
  • 20
    several studies have shown that users of pirated software/music/etc are highly unlikely to ever buy the legal version, even if the pirated version doesn't exist. they barely impact sales.
    – rmeador
    Aug 23, 2010 at 20:50
  • 24
    @Jon - The logical fallacy you have committed is to assume that everyone who steals your software would have paid for it had they not stolen it, which simply isn't true in the vast majority of cases. Yes there are R&D costs, however these are paid up-front - If the number of people buying your software remains the same, then financially it makes no difference whether 1 person or 1000 people steal your software.
    – Justin
    Aug 23, 2010 at 23:03
138
votes

I saw this interesting response today:

Response to finding cracked software on a torrent site

1
  • +1 I also use simple Boolean values in the preferences file for this. :)
    – user142019
    Jun 22, 2011 at 21:13
58
votes

Contact the site owner. They should remove the incriminated download. If they don't you'll have to sue them.

Anyway you should accept piracy as a natural part of your software lifecircle.

7
  • 153
    If they have Google AdSense up then contact Google. It's against their terms of service to have AdSense up on sites that promote illegal activities. You'll take away most of the fun for the site owner if you get their account cancelled.
    – John
    Aug 23, 2010 at 18:50
  • 18
    they have a youtube channel it seems ... where they present the latest cracked software ... will try to find where I can contact Google about it, thanks ! Aug 23, 2010 at 19:10
  • 7
    @Ican Zilb, youtube is owned by Google
    – Malfist
    Aug 23, 2010 at 20:07
  • 3
    @klez: ... at least if you're not developing web applications :-) Aug 23, 2010 at 21:02
  • +1 - I have done that a number of times and both piracy boards and file sharing services have been good at removing the cracked versions after I asked them.
    – KristoferA
    Aug 25, 2010 at 10:13
47
votes

I have to admit that I haven't read all the answers and the slew of comments, but here my view on the topic:

  1. Concentrate on making it as easy as possible to pay for the software. Think of Steam and iTunes. Dishonest people will always go to great lengths to avoid paying, but I think most people would gladly pay you if you make it easy enough.
  2. Keep the price low. If the price is low enough (say $5), it falls below the threshold of "practically free", and people will start thinking "$5 is nothing, I might as well pay".

These two combined will prevent your honest customers from trying to get a hacked copy of your software.

14
  • 4
    See success of the iPhone App Store too; impulse buys can bring significant revenue. You might even considering renting your software for $0.99/day to grab some impulse buyers, and convert them into full customers by offering them the $0.99/day back as a discount when they buy the full version.
    – MSalters
    Aug 24, 2010 at 14:22
  • 11
    The down side of this approach is that if the price is $5, a lot of people simply can't be bothered pulling their credit card out of their pocket. iTunes works because you click the app and it installs. As soon as the user has to go to another website and enter credit card information or a password, it's an uphill battle to keep them motivated. Aug 24, 2010 at 21:56
  • 5
    -1, You're assuming this isn't a complex piece of software aimed to customers who would pay more for it. Should software like Photoshop be $5? Would people who illegally download photoshop pay $5 for it? Probably not. If people don't want to pay, they aren't going to pay.
    – Jage
    Aug 25, 2010 at 15:01
  • 14
    @Jage: if Photoshop could make more money at a $5 pricepoint, then yes, it absolutely should be $5.
    – jalf
    Aug 26, 2010 at 11:49
  • 2
    Ease of payment is a big problem with e-commerce IMO. When someone enters their credit card info on the site of some small business is not only inconvenient (15 digits plus expiry date plus name and billing address) but a security risk, since you have to trust the site to keep your info secure. What equivalent of iTunes and Steam is there for your average software?
    – Qwertie
    Aug 29, 2010 at 17:42
33
votes

The most elegant solution I've seen was putting text along the lines on "cracks, warez, keygens, torrent files, free downloads etc. harm the publisher of this software" in small text at the bottom of all your web pages. It games the PageRank and (hopefully) causes users searching to cheat you to be sent to your site.

1
  • 6
    That is such an awesome counter measure!
    – Jasper
    Aug 25, 2010 at 9:37
25
votes

I would keep updating the software. Sure there must be some bugs to fix and new features to add that your customers asked? When a user has a pirated version and is happy with it finds out that your current version has more features that might be an incentive for him to buy the latest version.

Adding new features doesn't only make your existing customers happy, they also attract new customers.

9
  • 4
    If you can figure out how your software was cracked, you can have one of your updates check for the crack and report the user's IP address to you. You can use this to go after infringers, or alter your updates such that updates will not install correctly if the user has one of these "blacklisted" IPs. Given this information, you might also be able to trace back and find the crack's author (if it was caused by something like a CD Key being published).
    – bta
    Aug 23, 2010 at 21:23
  • The answer works the software has no auto-update mechanism, whereas @bta's comment works if the software does.
    – Matchu
    Aug 23, 2010 at 21:32
  • 15
    Tracking infringers by IP is a silly idea. I doubt individuals can take legal action on an IP. And how many people have static IPs? Blacklisting most IPs won't work if the user's IP changes (which it frequently will), leaving the next poor guy assigned the IP banned for no reason. Aug 25, 2010 at 4:30
  • 6
    I think it'd be illegal in most countries to make your software submit the user's IP to you without informing the user. As others have said, it is also useless.
    – jalf
    Aug 26, 2010 at 11:51
  • 2
    @bta @Frank Farmer @jalf: IP address tracking / phoning home is weak. What you want to do is make every copy of your program have a uniquely identifiable attribute, say, a random sequence of bytes in the initialized data section, or something more subtle, like an alteration in the assembled code. Then track each customer against these unique IDs, and you have a binary->customer map. Aug 29, 2010 at 20:55
22
votes

There's nothing you can do. Once the software is out there, it's out there. Sure, you could send all sorts of legal threats and takedown notices to the sites in question. And then those who acquired the software will post it to other sites.

If the software hadn't already been made available for free, you could cram it full of DRM and copy protection and so on.... which just get cracked. Microsoft must have spent billions trying to prevent people from pirating Windows. I still know a good handful of people who run pirated versions of Windows 7 with no problems.

You can't prevent people from pirating your software. What you can do is make people feel your software is worth paying for. Some developers have noticed some effect simply from posting a polite and personal message on torrent sites. On the torrent for your software, post a comment saying you're the developer of this software, and while you're glad to see that people like it, the money from software sales goes directly to you and your dog and no one else, and you can't afford to keep making software if you don't get paid. So please consider buying a license.

Some companies try to combat piracy simply by treating their customers well. Make it something that people want to use. Sell it at a price that people are willing to pay. Provide extras for paying customers. Provide good support to people with a valid license.

Some people are going to pirate your software. There's nothing you can do to prevent it. And it only takes one copy to appear on one warez site, before it spreads and becomes impossible to take down. On the other hand, those people who pirated it most likely weren't prepared to pay for it anyway. If they hadn't been able to pirate it, they simply wouldn't have used it. So in that sense, you haven't lost anything. Remember who your paying customers are. They are the ones you have to satisfy in order to run a successful business. The ones who don't pay aren't your customers, so they're a lot less important.

You might find this blog post an interesting read too.

And finally, because some people find it hard to accept that the world isn't black and white, and like to think that anyone who doesn't equate software pirates with some kind of evil zombie demon hitler are secretly pirates themselves, let me be absolutely clear:

I do not condone piracy. I am not saying you should love software pirates or treat them like your own children. I am merely saying that it is an unavoidable fact of life, and too many companies spend huge amounts on "piracy prevention" which doesn't prevent pirates from using their software, but does make the software less convenient to use for paying customers.

0
20
votes

Make you software work as SaaS in some cloud, so you'll be able to sell it for some traffic/features value, and will prevent it from cracking as it is.

1
  • 1
    I love this model more and more each day, but it isn't realistic for all markets. You should have more upvotes.
    – Incognito
    Aug 26, 2010 at 18:49
20
votes

This is obvious a highly personal reaction. I don't expect anyone else to share it: Celebrate! Someone thinks your software's worth stealing!

  • (a) It's impossible to prevent people from stealing your software,
  • (b) trying to only irritates your honest customers and
  • (c) people stealing your software means that you have solved the single biggest problem: obscurity. If no one knows of your program, no one's buying it. At least if someone's taken the trouble to crack your software, people know about your product. Another answer here offered several interesting ways of getting people to pay for your product.
3
  • 3
    How are you going to afford to buy the chamapagne
    – Tom Gullen
    Aug 25, 2010 at 8:14
  • 1
    @systempuntoout: so would i, from the money i make by spending all my time on features and not DRM that will get cracked anyway.
    – RCIX
    Aug 27, 2010 at 23:30
  • 1
    @Tom and @System point A makes your implication mute, unless it's a networked or internet product - but then the licensing is usually a huge PITA for your regular consumers. Aug 28, 2010 at 3:30
19
votes

Change your business model. Selling something that can be duplicated at zero cost and no limitations, isn't a smart idea.

Copyright and patents are only fake restrictions that can hardly work in the digital age.

21
  • 31
    At a fundamental level, the concept of property has been unchanged since the dawn of society; compared to that, the concept of owning an idea is an artificial restriction that was imposed explicitly to make a certain business model profitable. Aug 24, 2010 at 21:33
  • 9
    "If nature has made any one thing less susceptible than all others of exclusive property, it is the action of the thinking power called an idea..." lessig.org/blog/2009/05/jeffersons_remix_of_augustines.html
    – Matt R
    Aug 24, 2010 at 22:20
  • 11
    I don't understand what you are saying here, unless you are trying to say we shouldn't make software...
    – Jasper
    Aug 25, 2010 at 9:56
  • 4
    @Paul Nathan how would you feel if you would have to pay in order to use the Pythagorean theorem if it was invented just recently. You're using his idea. Aug 25, 2010 at 12:50
  • 12
    And yet, society is better off this way. If Pythagoras couldn't simultaneously survive and invent, then he shouldn't have invented. It's society's job to make sure this doesn't happen when we're interested in the results of the invention more so than the losses we're incurring from supporting the artists. This is a nontrivial inequality that must be continuously reevaluated, and the current situation is highly, highly imbalanced - society deprives itself of massive amounts of possible distribution and content for the benefit of a small group of businesspeople. Aug 25, 2010 at 18:04
18
votes

The good news is that if somebody bothered to crack your software that means it is popular/useful enough that people actually really want to use it... so you must be selling some!

Secondly, there is a school of thought that says that usage of the cracked version may actually boost awareness of your product and result in MORE SALES long term... Try to think of it as a free marketing campaign... :-)

6
  • 43
    (Many of us here are actually rather jealous of this problem... ;-)
    – Scrappydog
    Aug 23, 2010 at 18:38
  • 34
    A corollary to this answer (that I have heard from large companies such as Microsoft) is that it is preferred for a user to use a cracked version of your software than a paid-for version of your competitor's software. You don't get the revenue, but you still get the market share.
    – bta
    Aug 23, 2010 at 21:16
  • 3
    This is just rationalization. See Dana's great answer.
    – darron
    Aug 24, 2010 at 2:51
  • 17
    Microsoft's preference is a valid business strategy in markets where you have network effects. Sharing MS Office documents is such a network effect. The pirated versions still establish the MS Office file format. Single-player games otoh have no network effects, and there piracy eats directly into your bottom line.
    – MSalters
    Aug 24, 2010 at 14:18
  • @MSalters: Kind of. The network effect might be increased awareness of, and interest in, the sequel. If a few million people pirated the first game (and liked it), I'm sure some of them will buy the second one.
    – jalf
    Aug 26, 2010 at 11:54
12
votes

This reminds me of the autodesk/kinetix response, tho they claimed that the response was a complete accident, a byproduct of the crack itself.

A cracked version of 3DSMax had a nasty side behavior - each time it opened a model file it corrupted the vertex coordinates just a little bit more- not enough to be noticable on any given run, but over time, a lot of damage could take place. The cost of the program might be thousands, but the cost in time and dollars to repair the damage dwarfed that.

The mfgr claimed this was a complete accident/side effect of the crack, and to their credit here, I believe repaired something in their software - that said, they certainly delivered a powerful message to their user base......

Don't get the wrong idea - I'm not recommending this, especially since IANAL - on the other hand, I've always found it's an interesting anecdote

1
  • 2
    Interesting anecdote indeed, and definitely not something you should ever think of incorporating as a "feature" in your apps; software has bugs... what if you have a bug in your mess-with-pirate code which ends up triggering for legitimate customers? Oops.
    – snemarch
    Aug 27, 2010 at 8:48
10
votes

Just take what money you have, and move into another business. I gave up coding after the last bubble burst, and now own a couple of gas stations.

My staff have shotguns to protect our product, it seems to work better than vague legal threats and keygens/drm do in the software world.

1
  • I can imagine after another shoot-off, the gas station owner being convinced to take up a safer occupation, like developing software.
    – jontyc
    Dec 2, 2011 at 13:35
8
votes

It's not possible to make your software crack-proof.

However, there are legal things you can do. You can send cease-and-desist letters to the owner of the website to remove the cracked version from their website. You can also sue. You can contact the ISP of the owner of the website to let them know of the illegal activity of that website owner.

But in short--there's not really a whole lot you can do otherwise.

About a decade ago I created some software for sale that was quickly hacked. Then I created a version with a rather complex anti-hacking scheme in it with a scary (but meaningless) warning that only popped up when partial hacking was attempted--the warning threatened to destroy all data on the C: drive. That seemed to work (it's never been hacked--though its now completely obsolete), but only introduced some ugly support nightmares.

6
  • Thanks Russ, cease-and-desist letter? Should check what it is. It's a specialized site for downloading movies,music,software etc. I found it searching for my app's name in Google: If in China or somewhere, probably won't take note of my email? katz.cd Aug 23, 2010 at 18:41
  • 4
    cease-and-desist is a legal term--in essence "cease from your illegal activity and desist from any further illegal activity". And yeah, if in China, I'll bet it'll get ignored.
    – Russ
    Aug 23, 2010 at 18:45
  • I think Russ is saying his program didn't actually delete the C: drive. But a word of caution, If you make your program malicious, you'll be liable for the damage it causes.
    – davenpcj
    Aug 23, 2010 at 22:55
  • 1
    Of course it would NOT actually do anything malicious. It just would display the scary message to keep hackers from messing around with it. And of course, a normal user wouldn't even see the message.
    – Russ
    Aug 24, 2010 at 12:43
  • 5
    I understand you say that you really didn't destroy the user's data, but just in case others think this is a good idea, may I point out that if you did trash someone's hard drive, and then it turned out that he had not stolen your software but just mis-typed his key code ten times, or he bought it from what he thought was a legitimate retailer with no knowledge that it was stolen, etc, he would probably have grounds for a lawsuit against you. Hey, even if he admitted he stole it, he might win a lawusit, like the burglar who sues the homeowner for injuries sustained while robbing his house.
    – Jay
    Aug 24, 2010 at 14:02
7
votes

Contact Google with a DMCA notice, and have the page removed from the search index. This will make it difficult for people to find the pirated version.

http://www.google.com/support/bin/static.py?page=ts.cs&ts=1114905

6
votes

You never told us if the cracked version is from a demo version or not - but you should identify this directly from your builds.

Is my practice to identify customers in the build's with a ID constant in several places. That way I can find the source of the leak just downloading the cracked one.

Demo versions are prone to be cracked (but you should identify them too - one ID for tucows, other for major, etc). I don't have a easy way for that, except if you can consider online usage all the time.

Regards Rafael

5
votes

I believe that widespread software piracy usually means you're charging way too much for the basic version of your product, and that you'll ultimately be able to make much more money by drastically lowering the price of this entry edition - the market may even want this edition priced free. The key is then to properly segment the market to figure out who is able to pay what.

As an example of this, look at Visual Studio vs Delphi/C++ Builder. The two used to be very competitive, with old Broderbund/Borland perhaps even ahead of Visual Studio at one time. And then Microsoft figured out they needed to give away a base version of Visual Studio that honestly has enough features for most of us to get by if we really needed to. The result? Delphi/C++ Builder completely lost the low end of the market where the students are that feed into the more-lucrative professional market. Now they're fading fast into irrelevance.

15
  • 12
    @Joel I must disagree with what you say Joel. I did put a lot of effort into developing my application, and this effort is based on years of expensive study + years of work till I have that expertise needed to develop it. What would justify releasing this software free or underpriced? I release a lot of code for free to the fellow devs, but my product I'd like see covering at least my costs Aug 23, 2010 at 19:59
  • 11
    @Ican - I think you missed my point. This is economics - if you have widespread piracy, you will make more money by lowering your price. If you want to charge more, that's fine - but you "pay" for the privilege in terms of lost revenue, and the market pays in terms of under-served customers, some of whom will instead choose to pirate your product. That's a lose-lose for everyone. Don't make the mistake of confusing the price you charge for the value you deliver. Aug 23, 2010 at 20:38
  • 4
    I know of a game that's extremely underpriced for it's worth, and yet it's still pirated. This is the case for a lot of software.People generally pirate because they don't want to or can't pay for it (regardless of the price), not because it's too expensive.
    – RCIX
    Aug 24, 2010 at 3:41
  • 5
    C++Builder is a textbook case of managerial neglect/incompetence. The reason for market decline is simply that Borland/Inprise/Owner-of-the-week convinced enough of us developers that C++Builder (and Delphi) had no future. The entire point of C++Builder is to have a RAD GUI builder on top of Standard C++ with as little weirdness as possible. But years of neglect meant that it could no longer handle newer stuff like the latest Boost libraries. One of the top requests from customers was better C++ standards compliance, but they never listened. Eventually, customers got fed up and moved on.
    – MadCoder
    Aug 25, 2010 at 3:34
  • 2
    "if you have widespread piracy, you will make more money by lowering your price" There seems to be evidence to the contrary. For example, android apps are pirated widely -- even though they're almost exclusively priced at $1-5. How much more can you drop the price on a $1 app to stop piracy? Truth is, there are plenty of people who'd rather pirate than pay even 25 cents. Aug 25, 2010 at 4:34
5
votes

It's simple. In the old days, if you couldn't afford or didn't want the cops to protect your well, or if -- in fact -- the cops didn't care, know what you'd do?

You'd POISON THE WELL.

If I were you, I'd increase prices by 5%. Then I'd release a fully-functional demo that says "Registered to [crack]" that accidentally cracks up and malfunctions.

Publish this new version everywhere. Bitorrent, edonkey, usenet, all the pirate sites you find. Drown out the competition!

Then direct cracked users to customer support and offer them a 5% discount if they register now and give the site where they downloaded the crack.

Use the crack as a promo code to drive sells.

4
  • 4
    I doubt it'll work. The top torrent sites will just end up with comments that say "this version is poisoned - use such-and-such old version (link here) instead". Also, genuine early-adopter customers may see it and think its a not-quite-released-yet upgrade. And there are plenty of countries where any data loss as a result - even to pirates - would be classed as criminal damage.
    – user180247
    Aug 24, 2010 at 23:15
  • 3
    You don't have to make cause data loss. Just be a general pain.
    – d-_-b
    Aug 25, 2010 at 0:25
  • I didn't say anything about data loss. Just that this version is bugged, download the new version, then when they click on the link, tell them on the web page that you know they used a pirated copy but that this one time, they get a 10% discount. Aug 25, 2010 at 14:26
  • 6
    Then you'll have people posting 'don't buy this, it's lame and always crashes'. Aug 27, 2010 at 23:53
4
votes

I'd like to add, not paying for your software is like not paying your taxes. You may be getting ahead, but you are doing so by screwing everyone around you.

3
votes

Just accept it. most people that are pirating your software probably wouldn't have bought it anyway. But that's not a reason to stop making software, pretty much every major piece of software gets cracked and pirated, but Adobe, major game studios, etc. are all still in business.

5
  • True Adobe is still in business but they have lawyers and connections all over and I'm just a guy working in the night after getting home after his day job. It really hurts seeing it ripped off on the Internet Aug 23, 2010 at 18:44
  • @Ican: That's entirely true. Just means that if you have a day job, you don't need the income :P
    – Puppy
    Aug 23, 2010 at 19:00
  • @DeadMG I'd really prefer to work on my own software, put my creativity there you see, than stay on the day job :) Aug 23, 2010 at 19:56
  • This is just rationalization. See Dana's great answer.
    – darron
    Aug 24, 2010 at 2:55
  • 2
    @Ican: True Adobe is still in business but they have lawyers and connections all over and yet they are still wildly pirated. It really hurts seeing it ripped off on the Internet if it weren't for the Internet you wouldn't be selling at low cost of distribution in the worldwide market. Aug 24, 2010 at 13:44
3
votes

open source your software, then you won't have this problem :-)

15
  • 7
    Yeah, you won't have that problem, and, unless you're software is very useful, you also won't make any money. Writing FOSS is not really a business strategy. It's for coders with ballz!
    – d-_-b
    Aug 24, 2010 at 0:49
  • 7
    @sims I need to eat & pay rent, how do coders with ballz manage those 2? (provided living in my parents basement is not an option) Aug 24, 2010 at 10:30
  • 3
    @Ican: last I checked there were lots of FLOSS programmers making a living. None of them is a millionaire, but you don't get into FLOSS for the money. Also, depending on your software, you can sell your "services", not the executable. You don't have to provide the exe to people that are not your customers, but if they get a hold of it can use it, they'll just have to pay to get support. Either way, what you have to do is make it more compelling to get the real deal than the pirated copy. How you do that is up to you, but I'll give you a hint: what can't the pirates provide? Aug 24, 2010 at 13:53
  • 7
    @voyager: Just look at sourceforge, and you'll find millions of FLOSS projects that obviously did not make their developers a living. Here's my hint: good software doesn't need support, and bad software doesn't have users.
    – MSalters
    Aug 24, 2010 at 14:25
  • 3
    @MSa: bad software won't get you users either way, and good software can always be better. I've never seen any software that didn't need support (you can go without it, but it doesn't mean that support is completely unnecessary). Anyway, you got hung up on the first part of the comment, the important thing is what is your value added that pirates can't provide? it can be support, hardware, goodies, manual, customization, tailoring, etc. Aug 24, 2010 at 14:35
3
votes

I was so infuriated with some of comments and answers that justify software piracy that I had to write long rant: Is Software Piracy Stealing? .

11
  • -1: "Only conclusion is that developers are heavily pirating software."
    – ZippyV
    Aug 29, 2010 at 10:28
  • @ZippyV - i think that "conclusion" was to that particular paragraph, not the entire article, which starts off with a paragraph that includes " Some of answers and comments infuriated me". Granted, he could have said something more about those he agreed with, but i think it's clear that he's responding exclusively to the number of apparently professional software developers who seem to endorse theft of software.
    – b w
    Aug 29, 2010 at 11:17
  • @ZippyV Not true, there are valid points + explanation why are valid, great post. @zendar Great effort to take venting out of SO, congrats for the article, enjoyed it Aug 30, 2010 at 11:58
  • I am a software development professional and I don't pirate software. I also think that some people get way too emotional in their response to what a jerk who posts your software on the internet does. As a software development professional I recognize that jerks who don't buy my software could sometimes be convinced to pay, and that by calling them jerks, I decrease the chance that they will. So I keep my fits of hysteria to myself, and try to act in a calm manner, even if I am upset.
    – Warren P
    Aug 30, 2010 at 17:03
  • 1
    Finally, about condoning piracy: Many developers explicitly stated that we're against piracy, just that there are silver linings to every cloud. That doesn't mean we pirate software or want people to pirate ours.
    – RCIX
    Sep 7, 2010 at 4:06
3
votes
  • Consider piracy as a business expense that comes with the territory of having a product that can be sold to thousands at near zero product cost. We can't have it all our way.

  • Just use basic protection to stop customers passing it around. Anything more is not worth the time and expense.

  • Don't make your paying customers jump through licensing hoops. Often I'll pay for a product, get driven crazy by the licensing scheme and seek out a cracked version.

  • Make trials not by period but by hours used. It's easy to get diverted and not have a chance to evaluate the software. Most people won't consider to ask for an extension.

  • Consider if you've pirated music CDs, movies, software etc. yourself and rest in peace knowing it somewhat evens out.

  • Always have different levels of your product. People don't want to pay big bucks for a product they only use 10% of.

  • Make the product fantastic. Customers will eagerly await the latest version and not want to wait for a crack to appear. The users of poor products think, "I hate this product, it's full of bugs, but I haven't found anything better yet". That's inviting piracy.

2
votes

I find it disappointing how much people accept defeat nowadays and ignore ethical trespasses and things like fairness.

4
  • 11
    I find it disappointing how some people post answers that don't answer the question. No offense :-) Aug 25, 2010 at 13:23
  • Well my answer is implied by my statement - in that I would suggest doing the opposite of what disappoints me about humanity. I mean after all, we are developers and not QA testers. ;) We can think instead of need everything explicitly stated to us.
    – hyprsleepy
    Aug 26, 2010 at 17:28
  • 1
    We're not ignoring it, we're saying 2 things: A: our best efforts have failed (and believe me, they have), and B: we might as well look on the bright side and see that no one would steal our software if it wasn't worth anything.
    – RCIX
    Aug 27, 2010 at 23:35
  • Your example A is the very definition of accepting defeat and B is your positive response to A.
    – hyprsleepy
    Aug 30, 2010 at 20:29
2
votes

Make sure you properly version every update and version of teh product. Then store the hash of your executable file on a server and on first launch check to see if the exe file is altered. then you can take action if it is, like closing the program or deleting some of the file You installed so that the program won't start

4
  • 2
    -1 I bet it would be easy to set up a fake server, plus it would annoy every honest user trying to use an offline application when beeing, you know, offline. In fact, I wouldn't buy that software if another product without this crappy DRM was available at a similar price Aug 27, 2010 at 7:56
  • @Tobias A lot of "offline" products require online activation. Until the activation is performed it runs at a reduced functionality or just keeps bugging the users
    – Midhat
    Aug 27, 2010 at 8:05
  • Your modification into a one time activation makes it a bit more acceptable indeed, but it's still what I consider a nuisance. Especially when you decided to isolate your working machine from the internet. Aug 27, 2010 at 10:55
  • 1
    I'll second the cautions. One time activation may be tolerable, but can cause big problems, and does make me think very hard about buying. A permanant online requirement is an absolute no sale. The machine I use most is never connected to the internet or any network (and therefore doesn't need antivirus, firewall etc, meaning it runs faster and much more reliably than a theoretically several times faster PC with four times the RAM). Remember - you're probably competing with open source software (effectively free as in beer) that is perfectly usable and doesn't have all this extra baggage.
    – user180247
    Aug 27, 2010 at 11:30
2
votes

I don't know for sure what I would do in your position, but at least one developer who found his cracked software available as a torrent emailed the host to complain -- not about the crack, but about the quality of the crack. It seems that the cracker didn't do a very good job and made the software less desirable. The developer was apparently horrified that his product, with his name, was going out to people and would ruin his product's good reputation, and demanded that if someone was going to crack it, that they needed to do a better job!

This story showed up on Slashdot:

Developer Demands Pirate Bay Not Remove Torrent

1
vote

Also consider price. I have no idea what your software is but there are multiple markets for every product. For example Photoshop has a normal version that is a little out of the cost range of anyone wanting to touchup their vacation shots. For this reason they make elements, it doesn't do as much but it does serve a market. If your software is expensive and of limited personal use try releasing a home version. A trial version, an ad supported version.

What every you don't attempt to detect hacked versions. This type of DRM only annoys real users

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