-------- Original Message --------
Subject: Re: [NF] Windows Genuine Advantage suffers worldwide outage,
problems galore
From: Ed Leafe <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: Mon, August 27, 2007 6:42 am
To: ProFox Email List <[email protected]>

On Aug 27, 2007, at 9:23 AM, 
stephen.russell

@adribbers.com
 wrote:

> Ed, when you install the software use that is what was planned. 
> What if one of your kids gives a copy away to a friend? I believe 
> they are concerned with this process. Now take it one level 
> higher, a box builder who buys one copy of winders and installs it 
> over and over onto each box said box builder creates and sells.

So because there are people who are not honest, everyone should suffer?


Can you state how you are suffering?  I am still trying to understand how an 
install process or an update process that requires an account verification is 
putting you through.

 

"Suffering,or pain in this sense, is a basic affective experience of 
unpleasantness and aversion associated with harm or threat of harm in an 
individual. It constitutes the negative basis of affective states (emotions, 
feelings, moods, sentiments), while pleasure or happiness constitutes the 
positive basis."

 

Now to repeat the question from an earlier posting, do you still fly on 
commercial airlines now that security measures have increased your suffering?

 

 

 

 

 

 


If you were Microsoft and could prove that the box builder was doing 
this, send your lawyers after him. No argument there. But this is not 
the case.

> XP has the potential to be deactivated but have you every heard of 
> that happening? I mean an actual case of you know the people 
> involved? I know of two boxes that still have the windows nag 
> screen about unauthorized product. It still works, it just nags 
> the user every so often.

Yes, I have had experience with that. Being known as the local 
computer geek means that when someone in my circle of friends, or in 
each of their circle of friends has a problem, I usually hear about 
it. The most recent one was a company laptop that stopped working 
while the guy was away on a trip, and frantically called me from 
Florida to ask me what to do. And yes, it was a perfectly legal copy 
that just decided to deactivate itself for no reason that either we 
or Microsoft could figure out.

> Personally I'd love for a friend to purchase a new car and then 
> burn me a copy of it. ;->

Ah, so you're finally starting to get the idea that digital items 
are different than physical items. Maybe you'll finally be able to 
drop the misleading comparison to taking physical items when 
discussing this issue.

-- Ed Leafe
-- 
http://leafe.com

-- 
http://dabodev.com





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