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Vista users allowed to move house just once

Opinion and Analysis

It appears that Microsoft wants to make sure that its customers feel as if they are being treated with contempt - just in case they didn't already feel that way. Customers who pay up to US$400 for a copy of Vista Ultimate will for their investment be able to transfer their software to another machine just once instead of as many times as they like as is the case with XP.

Thus, if your machine packs it in, Microsoft in its benevolence will allow you to transfer the software to another machine. However, if after a year or so you decide to upgrade and pass your old machine on to another family member who only needs a copy of Vista Home Edition, it's just too bad because you'll have to fork out another US$400 because your license is no longer transferrable. Make no mistake. This is not piracy prevention. This is pure greed.

Microsoft claims that it is has a huge piracy problem. It has to tighten its rules with measures such as the Software Protection Program that has the power to disable computers deemed to house pirated software. It has to restrict users to the number of times they can re-install their software.

However, one has to ask then how was Microsoft able to build a global monopoly where Windows is installed on 90% or more of desktops despite this so-called piracy?

In spite of piracy, how was Microsoft able to achieve revenues of nearly US$25 billion and a profit of almost US$18.5 billion on its Windows and Office products alone in the fiscal year ended 2006?


SPONSORED ANNOUNCEMENTS

AVG Threat Labs to Provide Innovative, Free Detection Tools to Internet Community

Friday, 03 Sep 2010

AVG Technologies, developers of the world’s most popular free anti-virus software, today announced a limited public beta test of its new online tool, AVG Threat Labs. Designed to help consumers combat criminal elements on the Web, Threat Labs is an innovative online information portal that merges the quantitative Web threat detection data that AVG routinely collects from its almost 100 million users with data from AVG’s LinkScanner technology.


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