Microsoft changes OEM license, forcing new purchases after motherboard upgrade
Tuesday, February 21, 2006
Microsoft has recently made changes to the Windows license agreement, saying that, βAn upgrade of the motherboard is considered to result in a new personal computer to which Microsoft OEM operating system software cannot be transferred from another computer."
This will force users who upgrade their motherboard, even via the OEM, to purchase a new license agreement. The only exception is a defect for which the OEM replaces the motherboard.
Microsoft claims it needs to have "one base component left standing that would still define that original PC. Since the motherboard contains the CPU and is the heart and soul of the PC, when the motherboard is replaced (for reasons other than defect) a new PC is essentially created.β
Microsoft has asked its OEM partners to begin enforcing the new policy when they upgrade a client's computer.
Related news
[edit]- "Californian computer company lodges antitrust suit against Microsoft" β Wikinews, February 21, 2006
Sources
[edit]- "Techies in Microsoft licence reading bombshell" — The Register, February 17, 2006
- "Microsoft: Upgraded Motherboard = New Windows Licence" — Aviran's place, February 17, 2006