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RE: E-Waste Recycler Sentenced To Over A Year In Prison For Fixing Old PC’s and Selling Them
he got put in a cage for stealing and piracy. If you were an author and someone started selling bootleg copies of your book you wouldn't want to prosecute them for stealing from you?
Yet the hardware shipped with the OS, most right minded people consider it paid for at that point. It's just a legal loophole that should not be legal. If you have ever bought a PC with Windows on it and sold (or possibly even given it away) it second hand you are technically guilty of the same so called crime. If I was an author and someone sold my book second hand I wouldn't have any cause to prosecute, yet the likes of Microsoft claim the right to charge again. I know of at least one case in the EU where the courts made the correct decision and sent the corporation in question home with their tails between their legs.
https://www.computerworld.com/article/2505356/it-management/eu-court-rules-resale-of-used-software-licenses-is-legal----even-online.html
" If you have ever bought a PC with Windows on it and sold (or possibly even given it away) it second hand you are technically guilty of the same so called crime."
Nope, only if you make a pirated boot disk for it. That's where he made himself into a criminal.
This guy was not reselling used books, he was printing his own copies and selling them, see how that is different and wrong?
From the article above - "Although these restore disks come free with every computer, there is a license key that is tied to the first buyer, which makes it effectively impossible to restore these computers for private sale, that is, unless you want to pay Microsoft for an entirely new license, at which point most people would just choose to buy a new computer."
Now I am assuming the OP is accurate here, I have neither the time nor inclination to check this but I have worked in the industry for many years and come across all manner of unreasonable clauses in license agreements and have installed Windows XP more times than I care to remember. The most likely scenario, if he was sourcing the computers from individuals and small businesses (larger businesses tend to use a different licensing model) is this.
The disks come with the PC, they are useless without the license key, which is usually stuck to the PC case or behind the battery on a laptop, this sticker is the proof that Windows was paid for. Now it is likely he was using a copy of the disk itself as many people will have lost it by the time they scrap their computer but so long as the original license is still physically stuck to the box, I don't see the problem. In fact it is common to use a different disk to do the install because newer ones ship with the service packs and it saves time patching, the license key on the sticker still works though. If you actually read the license agreement Microsoft claim this license is fixed to both the hardware & the person buying it, so technically if you make a significant hardware upgrade or give the thing away, you are breaking this agreement. According to the article we are commenting on, this was microsoft's core argument.
The story above strongly implies that scenario, regardless" If you have ever bought a PC with Windows on it and sold (or possibly even given it away) it second hand you are technically guilty of the same so called crime." If you have done that you are guilty of piracy in Microsoft's eyes, it is that black and white to them.
As I have said elsewhere, this is perfectly legal in the EU, here you have a right to sell on software that you purchased and no longer use, despite the fine print foisted on you by the corporations often saying otherwise.
https://www.computerworld.com/article/2505356/it-management/eu-court-rules-resale-of-used-software-licenses-is-legal----even-online.html
In fact these days, there is rarely even a disk to copy, it's all online.
"it is likely he was using a copy"
there's where he got himself in trouble, and he was selling these computers after right?
That's a little different from reselling one computer.
Since it's all online he could have easily purchased the licenses, although I don't know how it's possible to run XP anymore.