I mean, I'm pretty opposed to violating software licenses, even if I don't necessarily agree with the terms (and if it's that huge an issue, I'll go without that particular piece of software) but if you are prevented from using something that you have obtained perfectly legally because someone else might want to try to pirate it, then what's the use? And now, I can't even circumvent the problem by avoiding proprietary software with restrictive licenses; I am not even able to obtain, through completely legal channels. some of the FOSS software I want to use because my university's tech support place is paranoid about Limewire.
Kamex wrote:
At any rate, I feel your pain Orwell. Hope you find a workaround.
I've been trying to ask the tech people if using bittorrent for legal downloads still carries the same punishment (since they monitor for the use of a bittorrent client, rather than what's actually being downloaded) and they just looked at me in incomprehension, as though it were completely inconceiveable that there could ever be a legal way to use bittorrent. And then they started saying to each other, in a somewhat confused manner, "well, I mean, what if it was for something he had paid for?" and I didn't even bother to correct them on that point, since they probably wouldn't have understood the distinction between illegal pirated music and FLOSS under the GNU GPL.
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