From: ez019654@othello.ucdavis.edu (Victoria Milliron) Subject: Re: How to the disks copy protected. Organization: University of California, Davis X-Newsreader: Tin 1.1 PL3 Lines: 29 Hmmm... A possibility for the software registration conondrum would be to have the distributor register the copy when the software was sold. The clerk sticks it in the store PC and asks for the buyers ID. Later, if pirated versions showed up they could be tracked to the original purchaser. In addition copies which were sent to distributors/stores would have a vendor reg # or serial # in order to track in store piracy. Possible additional program security schemes would be: 1. having monthly password changes which necessitate user call in and registration. (inconvenient) 2. taking dire legal action on anyone caught (expensive) 3. encryption, crc check, self modifying code (limited effectiveness) 4. have an independent watchdog program in the installation/setup config or memory manager, etc. which would check the main program's crc. (only as effective as above methods at best.) 5. have the above watchdog circulating as a virus which would trash cracked copies of the program and/or the offenders hard drive. (risky, and probably illegal, certainly immoral) my new ideas aren't terribly feasible to implement as presented, but I thought if I threw them out people could think of variations that might be effective. What is the problem with parallel port security keys? I haven't used anything that had hardware key copy protection schemes, so I don't know what the drawbacks are. I know the companies that make them claim they're uncrackable, but I've seen cracks of AutoDesk 3d-studio floating around (I don't have one so don't ask) and I had heard that it had parralel port keys. vamilliron@othello.ucd.edu -my apologies if I rambled, but vi inhibits my communication skills greatly.