![]() But I could also just let my friend use my PC to prepare their installation. This gives you some partially reasonable assurance that the user activating is actually the purchaser. Additionally, you could limit activations to one or two per day. Here's a great suggestion that I've used as a developer myself: each time a user asks to activate, require a username and password, and then send them an activation code via E-mail. But solving it by inconveniencing the legal users is a big no-no to me, and is enough to make me turn away from the app. I can totally sympathize with developers on dealing with piracy. Any developer that expects me to treat them like a parent and ask them nicely for permission to use the software I legally paid for is a developer I simply can't support. Sorry to sound blunt, but it is none of anyone's business why I upgrade my PC, change PCs, or whatever. I do not wish to deal with having to explain myself to the developer every time I upgrade or change machines. ![]() But that's not for the developer to decide. I have a home network running on Cisco hardware and multiple servers. I am a hardcore geek and I regularly use several machines in my home. Locking apps to one machine = I RUN FAST. ![]()
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