Re:Reselling Sonar...
2012/10/05 10:01:53
(permalink)
I read that article too - very interesting. To a large extent I have a lot of sympathy with the publishers working in the digital domain. The relative ease with which illegal transfers can be made has a huge impact on revenue streams, and without a working control process the restrictions they are working with such as simply preventing any resale makes sense.
What I think is more interesting is the secondary question: if the technical challenges around piracy were removed, would the publishers still wish to prevent resale? And I'm not sure that they would, because again it ultimately still reduces their revenue in the same way that physical media does.
It would be irritating, but we could be asked to authenticate software at some interval perhaps through a keygen or other online validation. A quick ping to cakewalk and my Sonar is authenticated against my account for another month. If I sell it on the new user takes the ID and licence, and when I next try to authenticate it fails.
For Cakewalk though they get my money only once, and they don't get anything for Mr New. Plus, what happens when I decide I want to upgrade to Sonar X3? At that point maybe I have to buy an entirely new copy at full retail, while lucky Mr New just pays the $100 for the upgrade. But really, that's the same problem everyone has in the physical world with cars, tv's or anything else.
For music files, and possibly ebooks, the other alternative is to licence for a specific period of time (bit like the bbc iPlayer model). At termination you either renew for a nominal fee or the file expires.
Either way it's going to be a long process to figure out, and as ever the legal teams will make the most!
Wood
Studio One 3 Pro, (Sonar Platinum), Intel i7, Win10 Pro, 32Gb ram, RME Babyface Pro, Behringer X-Touch, Presonus Faderport, Akai MPK49, Arturia KeyLab25, KRK Rokit 5 monitors, and other sonic surprises.