JWL:
Of course it's true that there are unethical people - - but, I'd guess, more frequently, simply a lot of musicians who lack the financial means to legitimately purchase expensive sample libraries and the software they'd like to have to work with. The latter is, I think, the reason that intensive copy protection is ubiquitous in the music software and sample industries. On the other hand, making sample libraries - - especially those that have been superseded by more advanced versions - - available at affordable prices to educational institutions and students also makes sense (E.g. One of my former students recently purchased Logic from his school bookstore - due to an agreement between the school and Apple - - at a price significantly below Apple's "educational price" - - and Apple is hardly known for reckless generosity - - and, in this case, the condition for obtaining the software at the lower price is that it is not upgradeable).
Such a practice, I think, is not simply altruistic but makes sense from a strictly business-oriented viewpoint. Students who go on to professional work are likely to remember the software and samples they worked with in school and to purchase both from the companies that made them.
I also think, along with JWL, that users who have purchased the newer version of a sample library should have the right to donate the older version to an educational instituion - - which seems to me an altogether more desirable outcome - - for everyone concerned, including the manufacturer of the sample libraries - - than disposing of those libraries in the trash. I strongly believe that legitmizing this kind of license transfer would be very much in the interests of the folks at VSL - - and everyone else.
Of course it's true that there are unethical people - - but, I'd guess, more frequently, simply a lot of musicians who lack the financial means to legitimately purchase expensive sample libraries and the software they'd like to have to work with. The latter is, I think, the reason that intensive copy protection is ubiquitous in the music software and sample industries. On the other hand, making sample libraries - - especially those that have been superseded by more advanced versions - - available at affordable prices to educational institutions and students also makes sense (E.g. One of my former students recently purchased Logic from his school bookstore - due to an agreement between the school and Apple - - at a price significantly below Apple's "educational price" - - and Apple is hardly known for reckless generosity - - and, in this case, the condition for obtaining the software at the lower price is that it is not upgradeable).
Such a practice, I think, is not simply altruistic but makes sense from a strictly business-oriented viewpoint. Students who go on to professional work are likely to remember the software and samples they worked with in school and to purchase both from the companies that made them.
I also think, along with JWL, that users who have purchased the newer version of a sample library should have the right to donate the older version to an educational instituion - - which seems to me an altogether more desirable outcome - - for everyone concerned, including the manufacturer of the sample libraries - - than disposing of those libraries in the trash. I strongly believe that legitmizing this kind of license transfer would be very much in the interests of the folks at VSL - - and everyone else.