Which is completely a function of your ignorance of how iLok works and its value proposition.himalaya wrote:Laughable!ghettosynth wrote:Your concerns are born of ignorance.himalaya wrote:Not "now". I said from the beginning that I don't know much about how iLok works beyond the many user reports of various iLok issues.ghettosynth wrote: So now you are conveying that you don't understand the technical details.
I'm kind of annoyed with myself for allowing myself to be sucked into long tedious topics about copy-protection, all out of fear of loosing access to products I have legitimately bought! I should not need to know the intricacies of how a copy-protection works, but I sure will voice my concerns.
My concerns are born of the fact that there appear to be software vendors who may not be willing to provide a replacement software licence when a computer dies, when said licence could not have been de-activated prior to the computer crashing!
Clearly, but you are drawing nonsense conclusions about how you think it should work based on your ignorance.I'm not telling anyone how iLok works.ghettosynth wrote: You don't understand how iLok works. Please go read the thread and learn something and stop talking to everyone else like they're the ones that don't understand. The entire point of iLok is that you have possession of the license and the control of that asset is not dependent on any online process.
Yes, to the ignorant I'm sure that it seems that way. If you understood how the system worked you'd realize that soft-ilok is a compromise that involves additional consumer risk. The fact that vendors think that you should be responsible for your own risk is not a problem from my perspective. That's exactly what entitlement looks like.soft-iLok appears to be designed to make people's life difficult in case of emergencies.
IMO, soft-ilok is a mistake and I suspect that Pace may consider ending it at some point in the future when their cloud service is online. Even if they don't. You can probably expect fewer vendors to allow it going forward. Given that Pace is able to have better control over the cloud service and that they are currently telling vendors that soft-ilok isn't secure, you can probably expect that most vendors will see the cloud service as a viable compromise to the soft-ilok that is a better balance of risk against market penetration.