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Comments on: Microsoft fires cannon at counterfeiters

How to Tell has been up since 2002 

Posted Friday 2nd November 2007 12:56 GMT

Dead Vulture

http://web.archive.org/web/20021201102855/http://www.microsoft.com/resources/howtotell/

New website 

Posted Friday 2nd November 2007 13:32 GMT

Paris Hilton

Hasn't that website been around for ages - linked from the help menu in XP's Explorer, it just appears to have had a small revamp.

I fail to see the Paris Hilton angle in this story.

Sure... 

Posted Friday 2nd November 2007 13:40 GMT

Coat

...750 thou jobs lost, but how many jobs created in the counterfeit market? Those are people too, you know!

hehehe

ps. I use a counterfeit Windows ME as my beer place mat (for all the right reasons).

Martin

well you do charge.. 

Posted Friday 2nd November 2007 14:13 GMT

Flame

Quite unfairly to be honest, why don't they try making it not look like the uk (and i assume the rest of Europe) should in some way have to pay more for the same software that is much cheaper in the us.

(yes my copy of xp is legit :P )

Vista 

Posted Friday 2nd November 2007 15:28 GMT

If Vista is so great, why is the market for counterfeit XP so healthy?

All my MS software is legit too... 

Posted Friday 2nd November 2007 16:51 GMT

Then again I don't run any.

WinXP and MSO2K3? 

Posted Friday 2nd November 2007 20:03 GMT

Windows 2000 and Office 2000 will do everything that most SOHO users need to do. Moreover, both products are mature and dependable.

Win2K is not only for older machines. Even most "bleeding edge" hardware provides driver support.

A bonus is that neither product is "advantaged" by WGA and forced updates and reboots.

Martin

If they know How to Tell 

Posted Friday 2nd November 2007 23:08 GMT

then why the **** don't they let Windows Genuine Advantage know, because that sure as **** doesn't.

Parallel importing is wrong? 

Posted Saturday 3rd November 2007 00:24 GMT

In recent months, Microsoft has been making similar legal noises in Europe, clamping down on the so-called "grey software" or parallel importing market, where branded goods bought in one country are flogged elsewhere at a marked-down price.

-------

Just me, or should that be perfectly OK? I don't see what's wrong with buying it, at the normal sale price, perfectly legitimately in one country and selling it in another. Just because it ruins their price gouging in one country, isn't it?

According to the BBC, 

Posted Sunday 4th November 2007 01:52 GMT

Happy

you have to use MS products, and you have pay more for it than Americans, and if you don't you go to jail, tough if you don't like it stop complaining and eat your gruel.

Given that MS has wrongly identified legit copies as pirated... 

Posted Monday 5th November 2007 09:29 GMT

Unhappy

Bad enough being told my son's legit copy of XP was invalid (an OEM install on an HP Pavillion, bought direct from HP? I don't think so!)...

But when I was told my copy of Vista was pirated, while the receipt for its purchase from my local Electronics Mega Store was still sitting on the package, (had just unwrapped it & was going to install it on said Pavillion), I was livid enough to take it back and MAKE the store give me my money back.

I and my son now run Linux.

I'd've bought a Mac, but I'm not THAT rich, thanks... =J.

@t3h 

Posted Tuesday 6th November 2007 10:35 GMT

Gates Horns

Spot on, mate!

I can accept all the fuss about counterfeit software... after all, it's linked to organised criime, and getting rid of that is in everyone's* interests.

BUT... and it's a big BUT... genuine software "intended" to be sold in another country is genuine... full stop. Whether or not Microsoft can sue the importers, users should just install and forget, as long as MS nobbleware doesn't somehow stop it working (but you shouldn't let it phone home if you can help it).

As has already been said, this is just protection of commercial profit... so sue, Microsoft, but we don't care. Your "cannon" just farted...

(If a fart is a "botty burp", is shiatzu a "botty sneeze"...?)

[Statement of the bleedin' obvious: well, almost... obviously, it's not in the interests of organised crime]