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May 30th, 2008

Sharing your login is a criminal offence

Posted by Phil Wainewright @ 2:19 pm

Categories: Software licensing, Business models

Tags: Software, Commoditization, Pricing Strategy, Software As A Service (SaaS), Pricing, Tools & Techniques, Marketing Research, Emerging Technologies, Marketing, Management

It looks like security-as-a-service is going to be one of the themes I cover here next week, and meanwhile I’m mulling a new post about SaaS and software pricing. So it seemed like a good moment to relay a comment that I heard from one of the panelists speaking back in February at the European ISV Summit in Frankfurt. Vincent Smyth, regional VP EMEA of digital protection vendor Macrovision made this rather striking assertion:

“Sharing logins is a form of piracy — it’s revenue leakage.”

Think about that next time you pass those scrappy post-it notes around the office so that everyone can get access to the Dun & Bradstreet credit reports, look up the Xignite currency data or share a single WebEx account. What you’re doing is tantamount to criminal larceny.

Maybe this on-demand version of software piracy is one reason why Microsoft is not really sure whether it wants to go through with its rumored pilot of pay-as-you-go Office streaming. For Macromedia, though — no slouch at protecting its own intellectual property, by the way, with “over 3500 issued or pending patents and patent applications worldwide” — it’s just another revenue opportunity. Smythe went on to mention several other on-demand “revenue leakage” scenarios, including drag-and-drop application provisioning in virtualized data centers or cloud-hosted application servers that access a backend database.

Another way of addressing the revenue threat of course is to embrace it head-on, as Zoli Erdos recommended earlier this week:

Yes, SaaS disrupts the traditional software market, but there’s another equally important trend happening: the commoditization of software. Commoditization is beneficial to customers, but a death-spiral to (most) vendors. Except for the few that drive commoditization.

The trouble with revenue protection is that it criminalizes would-be users in a last-ditch attempt to resist commoditization. Far better to adjust pricing to appeal to an emerging new class of users.

Phil Wainewright is a commentator and strategist on emerging software industry trends. See his full profile and disclosure of his industry affiliations.

  • Talkback
  • Most Recent of 15 Talkback(s)
RE: Sharing your login is a criminal offence
Don't people read the agreements when they get the logins? When there is a financial interest, the user agreement forbids sharing, and you are bound by it.

There are, of course, other logins th... (Read the rest)
Posted by: mejohnsn Posted on: 06/03/08 You are currently: Logged In | Log out
Maybe croberts   | 05/30/08
It really depends on the extent Pliny the Elder   | 05/30/08
RE: Sharing your login is a criminal offence glocks out   | 05/30/08
RE: Sharing your login is a criminal offence Chalkboy   | 05/30/08
only one person can log in at the same time on one login stevey_d   | 05/31/08
A super-station strip mash-up DannyO_0x98   | 05/31/08
Another Load of FUD from Phil Keith Mallen   | 05/31/08
It's not that simple. srobtjones@...   | 06/02/08
Free speech? srobtjones@...   | 06/02/08
No Understanding Whatsoever of The Concept of Free Speech Benabbydk   | 06/02/08
Maybe you didn't read the title of this article evano   | 06/02/08
RE: Sharing your login is a criminal offence v-stlowe@...   | 06/02/08
Yes, it is a Federal crime, no question terry flores   | 06/02/08
My reaction is ...... So? James Quinn   | 06/02/08
RE: Sharing your login is a criminal offence mejohnsn   | 06/03/08

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