This shows that you have never dealt with companies in 3rd world countries. When money is tight, which is always in those countries, there is not a cheap-enough price that you can make them pay. They want the benefit of the product but they do nit want to pay anything for it.
So, a free trial version in those places, will turn into a perpetual "free" trial. Same for "no proof needed" student/academic versions.
Unfortunately for the original poster, there is no solution to such a situation. Especially considering, they do nit want to spend an arm and a leg on legal enforcement, for a measly few thousand dollars worth of licensing fees.
The only solution I can see for this kind of problem is to design the product to run purely online, leaving nothing more than a UI on the customers' hardware, but since the product is out, there is no way to put that cat back into the bag. May be they should consider future, enhanced versions of their software to run online only.
tlb|3 years ago
- if those people someday move to a big company that can afford it, they'll be familiar with your sw
- they may blog about it or publish results from it, giving you free advertising
- reduces the market for a lower-cost version of your product, making new competitors less likely to form
ROTMetro|3 years ago
zihotki|3 years ago
SQueeeeeL|3 years ago
raverbashing|3 years ago
Help people who want to pay, most don't. And they won't, regardless of how many hoops you put as 'copy protection'. Yes doing it purely online will work, but that has its issues as well
908B64B197|3 years ago
At this point why not exclusively offer it to legitimate university users (with a valid .edu address)?
wobbly_bush|3 years ago