First I want to say I agree with Rusty that this is a lawyer's dream. Keith Smith already posted text from the legislature saying the software is valuable enough for this to qualify as a class 2 felony. You didn't say who did this, but if it's a friend or relative, I'd suggest you advise them to get rid of the software immediately. Why? Because somebody else could call the business software alliance, turn them in and get a big reward. If it's somebody you don't particularly like, you can be the one to make the call and get the reward. Just my 2 cents worth. That's actually $1.98 including tax. On 07/09/2013 04:11 PM, G Gambill wrote: > > What do you call it (technical name) when a company installs $45,000 > worth of evaluation software (with a dysfunctional security program to > restrict functionality and a termination routine that renders the > program totally non-functional after a set date.) on their computer > and reverse engineers the software and removes the the evaluation > restrictions, without paying for it? > > Anyone know if this would this be considered a felony? > > TIA > > George > > > -- > Success builds confidence. Failure builds knowledge. > > > --------------------------------------------------- > PLUG-discuss mailing list - PLUG-discuss@lists.phxlinux.org > To subscribe, unsubscribe, or to change your mail settings: > http://lists.phxlinux.org/mailman/listinfo/plug-discuss -- "I get my copy of the daily paper, look at the obituaries page, and if I’m not there, I carry on as usual." Patrick Moore