petem
Well-Known Member
Are you saying that pirated nav cards are fair game?In your view of course
Last edited:
Are you saying that pirated nav cards are fair game?In your view of course
Yup read that ages ago , yet the cards are still on sale , why would that be if the T&Cs were enforcable in this specific case.
Doesn't stop the pirates though. Mapsource had basically the same protection, was easy for the pirates to get around, code generators were created to hack the protections.Garmin charts are different to Navionics. Navionics specifically have copy protection which use the individual CID for each card meaning you can't copy them without hacking the original software which writes the charts.
If anybody would actually read the adverts it says they are not compatible with any Garmin products, they are just copies of open sourced Navionics charts that can work in some other makes of Plotter as listed in the descriptions.Garmin charts are different to Navionics. Navionics specifically have copy protection which use the individual CID for each card meaning you can't copy them without hacking the original software which writes the charts.
No chance of 2023 Navionicscharts being "open sourced".If anybody would actually read the adverts it says they are not compatible with any Garmin products, they are just copies of open sourced Navionics charts that can work in some other makes of Plotter as listed in the descriptions.
You can however make charts that work on a Garmin plotter from the Open Sea Chart database.No chance of 2023 Navionicscharts being "open sourced".
Navionics cards were made to work with the listed plotters, not Garmin. A Garmin plotter needs Garmin charts or in some cases (newer plotters) "Garmin Navionics"
You might think that, I could not possibly comment.You seem to be saying that because no-one has done anything about it yet then it's OK to participate?