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Jerry Feldman-2 wrote: > > Good post Mark. Certainly, vendors like Microsoft would like to restrict > the use of their software. Years ago, most software was licensed where > you had the right to use the software for a fixed period of time, and > you had to renew that license otherwise the software license would > expire... > I haven't thought much about the rental-like agreements Jerry describes, but I suppose if everyone's up front about it, it's fair enough... But the enderhanded BS that goes into today's EULA is nuts -- I agree with both of you. I have in my possession a Thinkpad that I purchased with Windows XP and a broken Dell laptop she purchased with Windows XP. Right now I'm running "pirated" Windows XP on my home-built "media center" computer and in a virtual machine under Ubuntu on the Thinkpad. I consider myself fully licensed and it's actually a point of pride that after being both FOSS-naive and money-poor in college I'm completely legit with media and software -- as far as my definition of 'legit' goes. Likewise, the mere act of liberating iTunes purchases from their DRM (see 'hymn') should be considered perfectly legitimate Fair Use. What you do after you liberate them is between you and your conscience and the vendor. -- View this message in context: http://www.nabble.com/Windows-virtualization-and-Linux-tp20519413s24859p20550366.html Sent from the Boston Linux/UNIX General Discussion List mailing list archive at Nabble.com.
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