Another reason software piracy is on the rise is due to the
increasingly high price of software and the speed which
software become obsolete. Let's take a drafting program
like AutoCad as an example. Due to it's inflated price only
people with a good paying job can afford it. Yet, it is
needed by students studying drafting in school. Some
teachers require it from their students, while others only
recommends it, but due to it's high price, it is virtually
impossible for students with bills to pay to afford it.
Even with student discount offered by the company, the
software is still pricey, and even if the student find the
money to purchase the software, in another month or so, the
software will be replaced by a newer and better version. It
will in turn make the old software obsolete. The only other
option is for the student to pirate a copy of the software.
This way the student will be kept current with the new
software. This just does not apply to just drafting
programs. Alot of other programs are being required or
requested by teachers for students to use, like Microsoft
Office. Also, many companies use everyday people to test
their new betas by posting it on the Web. Is this
considered piracy? What makes a beta any different from the
final version? The software companies use us as beta
tester, but still they charge such high prices on their
software when the final comes out. This is not fair to the
people that helped them debug their software to make them
money. The software company should at least reward the
testers with discounts on the final version. If they can
take advantage of us, the end user, why not take advantage
of them. What goes around, comes around.