Sorry to arrive late to this cubansoftwareasmunition conversation. week end
out with the family and the notebook.

I have always wonder how do you manage your licence in the sense of one
licence one machine. Or is there one licence one owner (might be more than
one machine). I ask this because there seem to be a rather discriminatory
practice in the industry with respect to Chile (and maybe other counries).

The software that it is sold here comes with a "physical key" that you have
to plug to the parallel port of your machine, part i understand, is not
included in the european, australian, japanice, canadian or american
package, isn't it?.

Don't explain you how owfull you feel when using the notebook in a client
office and not having the f.. key, that is sitting in the f.. desk top...
and here it comes this old presentation i have somewhere...


Juanse



----- Original Message -----
From: Jason McMahan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: MapInfo-L <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Monday, June 18, 2001 9:12 PM
Subject: MI-L MI Vaguely off-topic


> I just provided a printer driver to a colleague in Cuba -- whomever can
come
> and arrest me if they want.
>
> This brings up an interesting question:  What are the US laws regarding
> providing GIS or other data (and even such innocuous things as printer
> drivers, which could presumably be used to produce anti-Castro literature,
> thus furthering US Gov't aims) to *Blacklisted* countries like Cuba?
>
> Any GIS/Legal/Politicos out there care to clue me in?
>
>
>
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