So if a bank foreclosed on a car and refused to negotiate selling or renting it to you, you would be justified in stealing it?
Whether or not the bank in using the car or not is irrelevant.
Whether or not the previous owner had rented the car to someone else who gave you a ride in it is also irrelevant
That is exactly analogous to the issue about using a pirate copy of software that belonged to a now bankrupt company.
The bank may not want to negotiate licensing it to you or not. It is their property and theirs to do with as they see fit. Same as if they had forclosed on a car.
Just because you had someone else enter data through the software once, similar to being given a ride in the car, you have no further rights.
Al this discussion is doing is trying to justify stealing something simply because it is the easiest and quickest way out of a problem created by your own lack of due diligence in protecting your data by having it is a format that would be accessible to you long after the original software company went bankrupt.
We are engineers. That means two things in this discussion. The first is that we should be able to plan ahead and foresee the possible problems that may occur and take the necessary actions to avoid or at least mitigate those problems. Bankrupt software companies is a possibility just the same as the 1:100 year storm is a possibility in a building design.
The second is that we are professionals and bound by a code of ethics to obey the lay and not to steal items of value just because it is the easiest way out of our own predicament.
Remember our fellow engineers created this software and they are entitled to fair compensation for their work. If you can not find them to pay them for their work then do without it, don’t steal it.
Rick Kitson MBA P.Eng
Construction Project Management
From conception to completion