GotchaYou completely missed my point or maybe I didn't do a good job of wording it, so I'll try again....
Unfortunately. not all of us programmers are security experts and we need a protection scheme that we can easily integrate into our product, yet provide the most secure protection we can afford. Personally, my skills solely revolve around games. I generally don't write apps and the thought of writing anything database related causes me to grab my daughter's teddy bear and go hide under the bed in fear. I could not "crack" a program to save my life.
Armadillo was perfect for my needs, it was easy to implement and I didn't need to delve into Windows API to implement Armadillo. Armadillo was far more secure than anything I could dream of coming up with on my own, and I really had no methods of "enhancing" Armadillo's protection. At the time I used Armadillo, I felt it was the best out there. I rarely could find a working crack for any Armadillo protected app. Many claimed to work, but few did.
The only point I was trying to make, was that since the Digital River aquisition, that has changed. I am seeing a LOT of Armadillo protected apps being cracked. I am seeing cracks for Armadillo protected apps that NEVER had cracks available before (even big name titles that go for $200, etc). Does this mean Armadillo sucks, no. But, IMHO, Armadillo is not as secure as it used to be.
I am glad I don't have to worry about it anymore, as now I only plan to release freeware.


