That's naive, since requirements differ in different jurisdictions, asNaive? Who thinks a limit can be enforced by sw is naive!
I'm sure you are perfectly aware.
Precisely: One purpose of the driver is to enforce local compliance.It can't *enforce* it anyway, at least if the users are all around the world. At most it can *suggest*. Then it's up to the user to make sure to meet the local laws.
Then Australian shops can ask for the licence. And what about online shops? Ebay? They'll send you an unmarked package (same as letting you download another country's driver). The result is that you can have your LA more easyly than going to a local shop or tampering with your CB (or tampering whith the local version of the driver).But linear amplifiers are commonly sold. And (at least in Italy) it'sIn Australia it's illegal to own them (CB licensee; HAMs are allowed to
not illegal to buy one, even if it can boost antenna power to 1000W.
It's illegal just to USE it.
use them, although not on 27Mhz.)
Nope. The driver should simply make the device WORK. The USER must make sure to meet the local regulations. The driver can help, but as long as it asks the user a country setting, its enforcement is nearly nothing! The simpler way for the user to trick it into using illegal settings is simply to lie! It's like if your LA had a switch on it, allowing you to select the country.And it's a logical problem, too: why should the *driver* enforce aThat's part of it's purpose. It permits a manufacturer to make a global
*technical* limit?
device that operates within local restrictions.