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You can call me a prude if you like.
Mark asked "What would be wrong with it?" We are in an industry where
integrity must be above everything else. Once you lose your integrity, you
have lost everything. When you look into the mirror every morning, you have
to know that your integrity is intact. If you don't, then pretty soon
others will figure it out too. In this industry, If others figure out your
integrity is gone, then they change how they deal with you.
Are you going to jail? Probably not. Will you be remembered as a person
who had integrity?...
Jim
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Rus Newton [SMTP:rnewton@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx]
> Sent: Monday, February 08, 1999 3:28 AM
> To: Mark Brown; Omega List
> Subject: Re: Also Consider This
>
> I imagine they'd be a little unpopular with Omega, and probably in breach
> of
> copyright and/or software piracy legislation inside the European Union.
> Alot
> of controversial sites like this are actually situated/registered further
> afield (e.g. Indonesia).
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Mark Brown <markbrown@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
> To: Omega List <omega-list@xxxxxxxxxx>
> Date: 07 February 1999 16:26
> Subject: Also Consider This
>
>
> >If someone was to put on their FTP site (preferably overseas somewhere,
> >maybe in France) the latest version of the TS 5 beta. And then
> somewhere
> >else someone would put the crack for the entire TS 5 Pro Suite on another
> >FTP site. Then would that be illegal? what would be wrong with that?
> If
> >the persons were beta testers who did this I could see where they could
> get
> >in trouble because they probably signed something to prevent this type of
> >thing. But take an outcast who has no connection to Omega other than
> being
> >lied to for years, would he or she be in violation of some law? Do
> these
> >laws apply to FTP sites in Russia or other countries other than the US?
> >
> >Mark Brown
> >
> >
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