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Pirates as a Marketplace 214

John Riccitiello, the CEO of Electronic Arts, made some revealing comments in an interview with Kotaku about how the company's attitudes are shifting with regard to software piracy. Quoting: "Some of the people buying this DLC are not people who bought the game in a new shrink-wrapped box. That could be seen as a dark cloud, a mass of gamers who play a game without contributing a penny to EA. But around that cloud Riccitiello identified a silver lining: 'There's a sizable pirate market and a sizable second sale market and we want to try to generate revenue in that marketplace,' he said, pointing to DLC as a way to do it. The EA boss would prefer people bought their games, of course. 'I don't think anybody should pirate anything,' he said. 'I believe in the artistry of the people who build [the games industry.] I profoundly believe that. And when you steal from us, you steal from them. Having said that, there's a lot of people who do.' So encourage those pirates to pay for something, he figures. Riccitiello explained that EA's download services aren't perfect at distinguishing between used copies of games and pirated copies. As a result, he suggested, EA sells DLC to both communities of gamers. And that's how a pirate can turn into a paying customer."

Comment Re:Spot the dinosaur (Score 1, Insightful) 349

This new paradigma goes like that: software as a service vs. software as a product.

This article is spotting new trends that may take years to become at their fully. It is completely out of the Linux vs Windows dilemma.

Imagine you run a web session to use mail/calendar, word-processor or whatever app, and you don't need to care about the underlying browser (IE, Opera, Firefox...) or OS (Win flavors, unix flavors). You as a user will care less about backup, O.S. misbehaviours, HW issues... cause the code and data remain on the Network. In case of problems you'd just swap your commodity HW and move forward.

To me, this is the realization of the vision that Sun broadcasted 10+ years ago, where the "network will provide the applications on demmand". Instead of being Java, it has been made possible by chaps like Perl, Python, PHP,... data translation protocols like XML, asynchronous http, name it AJAX, running in server farms mostly powered by a Free Unix versions. At the end, I believe Google's living on such kind of infrastructure,

Not surprisingly MS has become aware of the threat, and it's starting to change its course, though inertias work both in favour (with their two cows still milking out at good levels) and agains, cause those culture changes in long-lived organizations take long time.

----------------- my advocacy

Free Software model encourages co-opetition, leverages the playing field, discourages from inventing the wheel back every few weeks. New companies and individuals sprout offering new solutions to old problems. Those who strive to make the software use a less painful experience and fulfill uncovered needs/desires will succeed (not necesarily meaning to become rich, but to make a good life out of it).

I would like to see this mix of cultural and technological changes making us move from the corporate capitalism mindset to a participative model.
At some point, it will be possible for everybody to become producer and/or consumer of digital goods, to invent, to express,... who knows ?

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