Additionally, you could limit activations to one or two per day. Here's a great suggestion that I've used as a developer myself: each time a user asks to activate, require a username and password, and then send them an activation code via E-mail. But solving it by inconveniencing the legal users is a big no-no to me, and is enough to make me turn away from the app. I can totally sympathize with developers on dealing with piracy. Any developer that expects me to treat them like a parent and ask them nicely for permission to use the software I legally paid for is a developer I simply can't support. Sorry to sound blunt, but it is none of anyone's business why I upgrade my PC, change PCs, or whatever. I do not wish to deal with having to explain myself to the developer every time I upgrade or change machines. But that's not for the developer to decide. I have a home network running on Cisco hardware and multiple servers. I am a hardcore geek and I regularly use several machines in my home. Locking apps to one machine = I RUN FAST.
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