定时炸弹 (软件) (Chinese Wikipedia)

Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "定时炸弹 (软件)" in Chinese language version.

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adobe.com

partners.adobe.com

oreilly.com

  • Williams, Sam. Free as in Freedom – Richard Stallman's Crusade for Free Software. O'Reilly. March 2002 [2008-09-26]. (原始内容存档于2015-09-10). In 1979, Reid made the decision to sell Scribe to a Pittsburgh-area software company called Unilogic. His graduate-student career ending, Reid says he simply was looking for a way to unload the program on a set of developers that would take pains to keep it from slipping into the public domain. To sweeten the deal, Reid also agreed to insert a set of time-dependent functions- "time bombs" in software-programmer parlance-that deactivated freely copied versions of the program after a 90-day expiration date. To avoid deactivation, users paid the software company, which then issued a code that disabled the internal time-bomb feature. 
  • Williams, Sam. Free as in Freedom – Richard Stallman's Crusade for Free Software. O'Reilly. March 2002 [2008-09-26]. (原始内容存档于2015-09-10). For Reid, the deal was a win-win. Scribe didn't fall into the public domain, and Unilogic recouped on its investment. For Stallman, it was a betrayal of the programmer ethos, pure and simple. Instead of honoring the notion of share-and-share alike, Reid had inserted a way for companies to compel programmers to pay for information access. 

web.archive.org

  • PostScript Printer Driver Optimization Case Study页面存档备份,存于互联网档案馆, Adobe Systems, Technical Note #5042, 31 March 1992. Page 5.
  • Williams, Sam. Free as in Freedom – Richard Stallman's Crusade for Free Software. O'Reilly. March 2002 [2008-09-26]. (原始内容存档于2015-09-10). In 1979, Reid made the decision to sell Scribe to a Pittsburgh-area software company called Unilogic. His graduate-student career ending, Reid says he simply was looking for a way to unload the program on a set of developers that would take pains to keep it from slipping into the public domain. To sweeten the deal, Reid also agreed to insert a set of time-dependent functions- "time bombs" in software-programmer parlance-that deactivated freely copied versions of the program after a 90-day expiration date. To avoid deactivation, users paid the software company, which then issued a code that disabled the internal time-bomb feature. 
  • Williams, Sam. Free as in Freedom – Richard Stallman's Crusade for Free Software. O'Reilly. March 2002 [2008-09-26]. (原始内容存档于2015-09-10). For Reid, the deal was a win-win. Scribe didn't fall into the public domain, and Unilogic recouped on its investment. For Stallman, it was a betrayal of the programmer ethos, pure and simple. Instead of honoring the notion of share-and-share alike, Reid had inserted a way for companies to compel programmers to pay for information access.