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in reply to Hiding source code (in a country with no laws)

I'm sorry but please don't blame our country or the government, since they have NOTHING to do with this.

Brazil have a very powerful and ever growing Open Source Community, and even in the copyright terrain there are tons of companies that work with licenses, including some who have special departments only for copyright issues involving software.

So I repeat: Please, ask your question, but DON'T put the blame on an entire country. Generalization is a bad thing, giving others wrong concepts is a bad thing and doing all this based on your past bad experiences is a bad thing, because EVERYONE in EVERY country has them, so just get over it.

Thank you,
  • Comment on Re: Hiding source code (in a country with no laws)

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Re^2: Hiding source code (in a country with no laws)
by perlsen (Chaplain) on Feb 09, 2006 at 08:36 UTC
    Good Comment given by you. because no one have the rights to blame an entire country. Because every country has its own originality and popularity.
    we can raise or ask questions and suggestion, so every one will give their solutions.

    In this question point of view

  • First We should make good product, which could satisfy the customer most of the time.
  • if we want to make good touch with customer, introduce new ideas or enhance your old product and deploy it in customer side.
  • if you always go for updation and new ideas, the customer always get in touch with you and welcomes your ideas.
  • Always, Try to make your Product more attractive.


  • Thanks,
    Perlsen
Re^2: Hiding source code (in a country with no laws)
by diego_de_lima (Beadle) on Feb 09, 2006 at 20:53 UTC
    I´m not acctualy blaming the country, but when you are making a new business plan, you have to consider seriously your country, market, language and technology strenghts and weakness.

    Based on the weakness, you have to find solutions. It's as simple as that.

    Brazil has a big open source community: that´s nice, but it's not the point now. In fact my company work with open source contracts, but now I have a contract which is not open source, and I want to protect it.

    I´ve wrote "(in a country with no laws)" because most discussion about it I've seen end up with: "Make good contracts and you are safe".

    Diego de Lima
      Quote: I´ve wrote "(in a country with no laws)" because most discussion about it I've seen end up with: "Make good contracts and you are safe". End of quote


      And this sentence continues to be true, here, there, anywhere. Put some clauses defining how the code should be protected, fines, punishments, everything. A good contract (whether is apllied here, in the U.S. or Mars) should always have that, being the code readable or not.

      Again I repeat: your problem is not specific to the country you are in. Your problem is, as a matter of fact, every software company's problem. And most people solve it with good contracts.

      I agree that your BP should consider everything including geographical, economic, social, anything that matters, but still I repeat: your problem has nothing to do with your country, it has with our market and the nature of our products.

      Sorry man, I don't mean to offend anyone, but I'll never agree with you posting here and there about how our country has no laws and such. There are many brazilian programmers here and I never saw any of them doing such statements.

      With all do respect,