[Info-vax] Thoughts on VSI Community License Program

Dave Froble davef at tsoft-inc.com
Fri Aug 14 15:23:46 EDT 2020


On 8/14/2020 11:38 AM, Arne Vajhøj wrote:
> On 8/14/2020 11:28 AM, Dave Froble wrote:
>> On 8/14/2020 8:39 AM, Arne Vajhøj wrote:
>>> On 8/14/2020 4:44 AM, Phillip Helbig (undress to reply) wrote:
>>>> In article <c5677abe-805f-45f9-bd1e-d3af9125f321o at googlegroups.com>,
>>>> David Goodwin <dgsoftnz at gmail.com> writes:
>>>>
>>>>> Removing access to the platforms main selling point to try and combat
>>>>> pirac=
>>>>> y seems like a pretty serious error. Piracy is the very last thing
>>>>> VSI shou=
>>>>> ld be concerned with. They would be lucky if piracy was a problem.
>>>>> Right no=
>>>>> w they're going to have a hard time even getting Linux users to
>>>>> seriously l=
>>>>> ook at OpenVMS at all, let alone consider pirating it.
>>>>
>>>> Sounds like the "it's good to `share' music because it benefits the
>>>> musician".  The musician himself can decide if he wants to give stuff
>>>> away.  So can VSI.  The idea that people first pirate stuff to try it
>>>> out then become paying customers is bullshit.
>>>>
>>>> Whether VMS piracy is a problem is a different question.
>>>>
>>>>> Also, they seem to not realise that a company pirating OpenVMS is
>>>>> better for VSI than one that just gives up and runs Linux. A
>>>>> company that's
>>>>> pirating OpenVMS is at least creating demand for OpenVMS experts and
>>>>> software and is a potential VSI customer.
>>>>
>>>> Really?  Someone morally low enough to steal intellectual property will
>>>> have a vision and become a paying customer?
>>>>
>>>> It is attitudes like this which seriously endanger hobbyist licenses.
>>>>
>>>>> The pool of OpenVMS experts and available softw=
>>>>> are needs to be much much larger than it is for OpenVMS to be
>>>>> competitive w=
>>>>> ith linux.
>>>>
>>>> VMS will probably never compete with Linux.
>>>
>>> And before anyone starts to go down the pirate path let me link to:
>>>
>>> https://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/text/18/2319
>>>
>>> Usually doing "something" for VMS is good.
>>>
>>> But doing 1/3/5/6/10 years for VMS is not good.
>>>
>>> :-)
>>
>> It's once again proven, "human intelligence" is a myth .....
>>
>> So, though it's probably hopeless, I'll try once again to help
>> understanding.
>>
>> Some will claim that if say 10,000 commercial users of VMS are not
>> paying for VSI support (best revenue method for VSI) that it will
>> cause financial loss for VSI.  Consider the case that the "illegal"
>> users would stop using VMS before paying one dollar for such use.  So,
>> then, how much revenue is VSI losing?
>>
>> Under those conditions the only correct answer is ....
>>
>> wait for it ....
>>
>> NOT ONE DOLLAR!  NOT ONE RED CENT!
>>
>> One cannot lose anything one was never going to get.
>>
>> However, consider what those 10,000 users will be doing.
>>
>> There will be a substantial number of employees working with VMS.
>>
>> There will be the realization that VMS is a good solution for many
>> requirements.
>>
>> Perhaps in some cases a law abiding person ends up in charge, and
>> decides to become "legal".
>>
>> The cheap bastards probably won't pay decent salaries, so there will
>> be a large number of VMS capable people looking for better jobs, and
>> available to VMS users who are a revenue source for VSI.
>>
>> Such a scenario would be one of the better things to happen for VSI.
>
> And?
>
> The law is still the law.
>
> Some people think piracy is OK if the pirate would not have paid anyway.
>
> The mafia thought is was OK to kill people that broke their code of
> conduct.
>
> And so on.
>
> But laws applies to everyone.
>
> Laws is not something you pick and chose among. I like those two laws
> so I follow them, but I don't like the third one so I will ignore that.
> Doesn't work that way.
>
> Arne
>
>

Who is talking about laws?  Not me.  I'm just suggesting pros and cons 
if some decided to use VMS without VSI permission.

As far as I'm concerned, VSI should make their product free to everyone, 
with commercial use requiring support contract.

Ask Red Hat what they think of such a thing.

-- 
David Froble                       Tel: 724-529-0450
Dave Froble Enterprises, Inc.      E-Mail: davef at tsoft-inc.com
DFE Ultralights, Inc.
170 Grimplin Road
Vanderbilt, PA  15486



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