OP 12 October, 2019 - 08:43 PM
Because a program needs the pc to work. The old days you could just reinstall windows and start again. Sometimes you can just simply tuen back the clock and it still works. Recently I've found simply blocking a registry key works. Licensing serials and an online connectivity is required has proved a little harder for people to crack. But what happens when your provider breaks down for the day? Your online security DRM check will return a fail. So your business will lose money that day. But there are new ways being found to bypass this. Look at Photoshop. Everyone in the dark panicked when it went to the CLOUDS! But all it takes is swapping a simple .DLL over with another and the program believes its a proper version.
People crack stuff for fun. Its when it gets disputed by those who break the rules it becomes illegal. Afterall is it illegal if you download a trial program, crack it and then just never release the crack? Perhaps you're finding weaknesses in the software just to inform the makers. Thus making you an asset to their weakness which in turn becomes their credit? I have told several companies what weaknesses are found. It seems none are yet to listen or care to be honest.
People crack stuff for fun. Its when it gets disputed by those who break the rules it becomes illegal. Afterall is it illegal if you download a trial program, crack it and then just never release the crack? Perhaps you're finding weaknesses in the software just to inform the makers. Thus making you an asset to their weakness which in turn becomes their credit? I have told several companies what weaknesses are found. It seems none are yet to listen or care to be honest.