Hi Paul,
Thank you very much for answering. I'll be sure to "refresh" the Vienna Key each two years, to protect myself from malfunctioning.
@Paul said:
It makes sense to be careful with all license keys. I carry mine in a padded box, always close to me when I travel.
When I had to go around with Emagic's Logic, I used to carry the dongle into a pocket camera bag. But some years earlier, one of my friends managed to break his Atari ST cartridge port by moving the computer with Cubase's protection still inserted. Still, even if you are careful, these things can break because of heat, cold, humidity, or a momentary distraction. I hate dongles!
While I understand the need for copy protection, I have to note that the current system is not protecting the customers. As far as I know, when purchasing software we purchase the right to use it. If the protection system breaks, or is stolen, the customer still has the right to use the software, while paying for the broken thing. I admit this is a grey area in law, and we are still debating between national laws (or lack of), European directives (never too specific), high-court sentences (sometimes having to interpret foggy laws).
I'm very curious to know how the other users have prepared to the evenience of a catastrophic event. How do people actually protect their investment?
I hope that you can adopt the same system used by Steinberg (the supplier of the eLicenser system you use), fully protecting the customer, while (I guess) still protecting Steinberg from software theft.
Paolo