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Software licensing must evolve: execs

Software licensing must evolve: execs By:  Paul Krill On: 20 Oct 2003 For: Channelworld India 

Software licensing practices must change to accommodate economic and technology trends, stressed officials at the SoftSummit conference in San Jose earlier this month.



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Software licensing practices must change to accommodate economic and technology trends, stressed officials at the SoftSummit conference in San Jose earlier this month.

Officials from Macromedia Inc., which is using an electronic licensing-based format for some of its applications, and Macro­vision Inc., which introduced the FlexNet e-licensing platform, both stressed the criti­cality of evolving software licensing schemes.

"Pricing and licensing is not as sexy as (technology), but you know it's a pretty hot topic," said Tom Hale, senior vice-president of business strategy at Macromedia. "Our customers are more and more diverse and having different needs. It's a very big challenge for us to have to deal with this."

One-size-fits-all solutions are no longer the rule, Hale said. "It's very rare that you see off-the-shelf deals anymore. Everything's customized."

Customers pick and choose what features they want to use and licensing must accommodate that, according to Hale. Vendors, meanwhile, are trying to create ongoing, predictable revenue streams and battle issues such as software piracy, he noted.

Macromedia is using e-licensing, which has customers electronically entering serial numbers for access to software so they get the software they pay for, Hale explained. Through e-licensing, Macromedia has been able to electronically deploy product activation, said Hale.

"We actually need to educate our customers so they understand the benefits of e-licensing," he said.

Macromedia was able to simplify shipping by bundling both Macintosh and Windows versions of software in the same box and have customers license which version they want electronically.

In relaying its message about licensing, Macromedia has stressed the term, "casual copying," as opposed to the term, "anti-piracy," Hale said. The company has found about 17 per cent of total activation volume is denied in the company's anti-piracy efforts, he said.

Macromedia has activated tens of thousands of clients with its product activation plan. "We're not seeing a huge groundswell of negative comments," although there have been some tough comments, said Hale.

The enterprise pricing model, including long implementation times and product service arrangements, is dying, to be replaced by software as a service, Hale said. It is being outmoded by arrangements such as the application service provider (ASP) model, which has seen online customer relationship management (CRM) software vendor salesforce.com make a dent in that marketplace, he noted.

Deployment of software on devices such as PDAs also requires new licensing models. For example, a telecommunications provider may be licensing software on behalf of PDA users, said Hale.


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Paul Krill Paul Krill is a contributor to the International Data Group (IDG) News Service, which publishes global technology stories from bureaus around the world to more than 300 publications in more than 60 countries.

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