Lik-Sang Are Back
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Lik Sang, one of the world's leading distributors of mod chips, is now back in business, under new management and no longer selling the controversial product.
"Since this morning actually the orders are coming back to us, and the payments also. So things are improving," says Pascal Clarysse, marketing manager of Lik-Sang.com.
"This is an absolute crackdown on the technology," says Kampl. (lik-sang founder)
"And it doesn't only happen to Lik Sang International Limited in Hong Kong now. It happens everywhere all around the world."
Sony and Nintendo declined to comment on the issue, but Microsoft told CNN: "Entertainment software piracy and the modification chips ('mod chips') that enable it, pose a serious problem for the video game industry."
"They've set a business model that relies on making money on game sales rather than box sales. That's part of their problem," says Dan Gillmor, tech columnist at San Jose Mercury news.
"It's as if the TV was sold to you at a loss and they're going to somehow make up the money on the programming. They'll be very anxious to make you watch only the certain kind of programming."
Kampl is confident he can fight the video game Goliaths, while Clarysse (marketing manager) gets the shipments out.
"At the moment, we're more regarded as a pirate company or something, which we are absolutely not," says Clarysse.
Read the whole article here.
"Since this morning actually the orders are coming back to us, and the payments also. So things are improving," says Pascal Clarysse, marketing manager of Lik-Sang.com.
"This is an absolute crackdown on the technology," says Kampl. (lik-sang founder)
"And it doesn't only happen to Lik Sang International Limited in Hong Kong now. It happens everywhere all around the world."
Sony and Nintendo declined to comment on the issue, but Microsoft told CNN: "Entertainment software piracy and the modification chips ('mod chips') that enable it, pose a serious problem for the video game industry."
"They've set a business model that relies on making money on game sales rather than box sales. That's part of their problem," says Dan Gillmor, tech columnist at San Jose Mercury news.
"It's as if the TV was sold to you at a loss and they're going to somehow make up the money on the programming. They'll be very anxious to make you watch only the certain kind of programming."
Kampl is confident he can fight the video game Goliaths, while Clarysse (marketing manager) gets the shipments out.
"At the moment, we're more regarded as a pirate company or something, which we are absolutely not," says Clarysse.
Read the whole article here.
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