On Tue, May 02, 2006 at 01:35:20PM -0600, Christopher Nelson wrote: > > > If I wrote a program that I wished to keep for myself, I might encode > > > into it a way to make sure that only I am running it. If someone then > > > steals my private program, what is essentially my property, they can > > > benefit from it without my consent. You are enabling theft without > > > repercussion. > > > > If you keep it to yourself, only you have access to it > > anyways. I don't see a problem here. > > Then please re-read the message. The program is *STOLEN* from me. That > is a problem.
So how did this "theft" (which I don't agree it is, but anyway) happen? And why do you think a confined constructor is capable of preventing it? Thanks, Bas -- I encourage people to send encrypted e-mail (see http://www.gnupg.org). If you have problems reading my e-mail, use a better reader. Please send the central message of e-mails as plain text in the message body, not as HTML and definitely not as MS Word. Please do not use the MS Word format for attachments either. For more information, see http://129.125.47.90/e-mail.html
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