They even use google checkout to charge for membership. Nice.

On Sun, Sep 27, 2009 at 8:21 PM, Shane Isbell <[email protected]>wrote:

> Looks like these guys: http://www.androidplayground.net charge for pirated
> apps. Guess it's all passed the playful hacker stage to going criminal now.
>
>
> On Fri, Sep 11, 2009 at 10:16 AM, DataSpa <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>>
>> I am not a developer but as a user and lover of my google phone and
>> many apps I would suggest that anyone who goes through the time and
>> effort to obtain a cracked app over an app they can buy for only a
>> couple bucks is either a kid, with no access to an account to make a
>> proper purchase or someone who wouldn't buy the app no matter what it
>> cost. They are probably sluurping back a $5.00 starbucks coffee with a
>> phone full of cracked apps... In this case there isn't too much to be
>> done, money spent on lawyers and implementing DRM is going to be
>> wasted as these apps will be cracked eventually anyway. Getting new
>> apps to market seems like a better investment of time and energy to
>> me. But once again, I am not a developer. I would simply make a note
>> of your website on the app with a link to support docs and a donation
>> button, you can always post other options for people to buy the apps
>> on yoru site as listed above... Who knows, it may be idealistic but
>> you may get some people like myself who actually pay a bit more for
>> apps they use regularly and see development on!
>>
>> Either way, good luck and KEEP DEVELOPING!
>>
>> On Sep 2, 7:55 pm, Jeff <[email protected]> wrote:
>> > If your app is on that web site, you can contact the file hosting
>> > services they link to and in most cases they will quickly remove the
>> > file.  But unfortunately, I seem to be contacting these services every
>> > week.  I forwarded that web site to Xavier (Google Engineer) to see if
>> > they can at least remove the web site from Google Search results
>> > (yesterday). No response yet.
>> >
>> > Just to reiterate, piracy on Android is entirely too easy since a non-
>> > rooted device can download a pirated app.  At least in the iPhone
>> > case, both phones must be jailbreaked.
>> >
>> > I'm also holding off on publishing additional apps.  I'm hoping the
>> > rumored Android Market update has some better piracy protection.
>> >
>> > On Sep 2, 3:15 pm, terryowen <[email protected]> wrote:
>> >
>> >
>> >
>> > > On Sep 2, 4:49 pm, mscwd01 <[email protected]> wrote:
>> >
>> > > > The obvious solution would be to offer the app as free and then
>> charge
>> > > > users to activate the app by paying you directly, but i'm guessing
>> > > > Google wouldn't allow that.
>> >
>> > > > The only solution is this:
>> >
>> > > > All apps when purchased are somehow modified to only run on the
>> phone
>> > > > which purchased it. All phones have a unique ID so this shouldn't be
>> > > > an issue.
>> > > > This would require the apk to be modified by Google at purchase so
>> the
>> > > > apk knew only to function on the phone requesting the purchase.
>> > > > Then if the person who downloaded it felt he wanted to offer it as
>> > > > free, it would be pointless as it' only work on their phone.
>> >
>> > > > Seems a logical way to prevent piracy of apps, am I overlooking
>> > > > something obvious?
>> >
>> > > > On Sep 2, 9:33 pm, Shane Isbell <[email protected]> wrote:
>> >
>> > > > > If you have doubts about the harmful effects of piracy, you should
>> watch
>> > > > > this youtube video:
>> http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=32wmepTVM3I&feature=channel
>> >
>> > > > > --
>> > > > > Shane Isbell (Co-founder of SlideME LLC)
>> http://twitter.com/sisbellhttp://twitter.com/slideme
>> >
>> > > I think pirates would probably find away around it.  But regular
>> > > consumers would be at risk when it came to hardware failures and
>> > > developers going out of business.
>> >
>> > > And what about people who upgrade their phones?  Would those purchases
>> > > transfer?  I'd only purchase something keyed to the phone if a lot of
>> > > questions were answered first. And to be honest, I'd probably stop
>> > > buying apps because what guarantee would I have that an individual
>> > > developer wouldn't quit, leaving customers without access to apps
>> > > they'd paid for?
>> >
>> > > I have ebooks I bought a dozen devices ago.  If they had been keyed to
>> > > the device I would have lost them.  In fact, I made the mistake of
>> > > purchasing a few pdf files many years ago that had something like that
>> > > and not only did the company fold, the DRM didn't work properly even
>> > > on the same computer and I had no recourse.
>> >
>> > > I don't doubt that piracy hurts developers (and consumers in the long
>> > > run) but more restrictive DRM isn't the solution.
>> >
>> > > Terry- Hide quoted text -
>> >
>> > - Show quoted text -
>>
>> >>
>>
>
>
> --
> Shane Isbell (Co-founder of SlideME - The Original Market for Android)
> http://twitter.com/sisbell
> http://twitter.com/slideme
>



-- 
Shane Isbell (Co-founder of SlideME - The Original Market for Android)
http://twitter.com/sisbell
http://twitter.com/slideme

--~--~---------~--~----~------------~-------~--~----~
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Android Discuss" group.
To post to this group, send email to [email protected]
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to 
[email protected]
For more options, visit this group at 
http://groups.google.com/group/android-discuss?hl=en
-~----------~----~----~----~------~----~------~--~---

Reply via email to