You buy a program and you install it you have it in your computer for ever .
You
license a program. You don't buy it. No transfer of ownership happens. Zero.
That's a key thing that most don't get.
Now Sai Flexi is back dooring a fee . Basically still selling product at a profit and not supporting all the profit being made to build their company . Sounds like a class action lawsuit
The version that you have a problem with is a legacy version. It's not the current version. If this was the current version and doing this, I can somewhat see your point. However, this is a legacy version.
If I'm not mistaken, wasn't Corel doing the same thing with hocking their latest version when people would start up their DRAW program when it had an internet connection?
Another thing is we bought the program how does Sai Flexi get into your computer ? We never gave them access to the program we bought out right .
Again, you licensed it. You didn't buy it. You gave Flexi the ability to intertwine with your computer when you installed their product. Welcome to the wonders of closed source programs.
I have what MS does with their Win 10 version far worse then this. Especially considering the implications of an OS versus just a program.
WTF are we talking about . How does the software expire that is not being accessed by the internet ?
Right off hand, they could use the clock that's on your system. That's how those 10 day trials etc expire even without access to the internet.
If your program doesn't need an internet connection and doesn't have one (which any production computer shouldn't have an internet connection period), then no, it shouldn't expire in one sense. It will still have an EOL, either due to support issues (remember we are talking about legacy software here) or you need a new computer with newer hardware/OS that the legacy program can't run on etc. There is a finite life span on everything.
Cars expire ?
Houses expire ?
So my house will expire because I have owned it to long ?
Not due to the length of ownership, just by age. Things wear out. You have to buy for things yourself to get the up to snuff.
In terms of legacy software, you are either going to have to keep old computers around running said software or (and my personal choice) VM it on current hardware. However, don't expect any type of support on VMing even if the software wasn't legacy (which what we are talking about is) as most software vendors do not support their software in a virtualized environment, which I can understand.