Microsoft Tightens Vista Transfer Rights Under New License

You'll be able to transfer Vista legally to only one PC other than the one you 
buy Vista for.

Elizabeth Montalbano, IDG News Service

Monday, October 16, 2006 03:00 PM PDT

Microsoft said today it will limit the number of machines to which users can 
transfer the Windows Vista OS licenses, to just one system beyond the original
PC.

When Windows Vista is available, consumers will be able to transfer the OS 
license they purchase to only one machine other than the one for which they 
originally
buy Vista, says Shanen Boettcher, a Windows general manager at Microsoft. He 
says Microsoft thinks the change makes sense because "lifetimes for PCs are
getting longer." Most likely, a user will not need to transfer an OS license to 
more than one computer during the time that OS is the latest one available,
Boettcher says.

"It's a fit for what most customers do," he says. Boettcher adds that XP did 
not have a specific limit for the number of times the license was transferable,
but that Microsoft wanted to be "specific" about transfer rights with Vista.

Not So, Says User

One Windows user in New York says that one transfer is "probably enough for 
most people." However, the user, who asked not to be named, says the change
may encourage Windows piracy among PC enthusiasts who update their machines on 
a more regular basis. "Power users will pirate what they need," he says.

Another change Microsoft has made to Windows client licensing after Windows XP 
is that only two versions of Vista--Windows Vista Ultimate and Windows Vista
Business--can be run as a virtual OS in a virtual machine.

"Virtualization is a new technology, and it's primarily used in the business 
space and by technology enthusiasts," Boettcher says. "It fits in well with
the target audience for these [Windows versions]." Windows XP did not have any 
restrictions on running in a virtual environment, he adds.

Vista Antipiracy Features Also Tightened

Microsoft also has tightened up antipiracy features in Vista, and users who do 
not verify that their version of the OS is authentic with a software license
key within 30 days of its activation will lose the use of certain features of 
the PC until they do so. The company unveiled this characteristic of Vista,
called its
Software Protection Platform ,
about two weeks ago.

Joel Richman, a Windows user in Boston, says that as long as the process of 
checking for pirated software "does not stop my workflow in the middle of the
day," he approves of this change to Vista's license. "As a consumer, I wouldn't 
want a pirated version of [Vista] because I want all the support I expect
to go with a licensed piece of software," Richman says.

Vikas Kapoor,
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