>>>It's scary:
>>>
>>>
http://internetweek.cmp.com/193300242?cid=rssfeed_pl_inw>>
>>Yes, that's the article I read as well.
>
>It's a bit oddly worded, and I wonder how well one could argue semantics.
>
>
>"The first user of the software may reassign the license to another device one time. If you
>reassign the license, that other device becomes the "licensed device," reads the license for
>Windows Vista Home Basic, Home Premium, Ultimate, and Business. In other words, once a retail
>copy of Vista is installed on a PC, it can be moved to another system only once.
>
>
>Does the first line only apply to the 'first user'? Does this mean that the second user can reassign it as many times as he/she likes?
>
>Taking the last line, it seems that if I install it on my pc I can move it from that pc only once, but then it becomes installed on the other pc. So then it can be moved from that pc only once... etc.
>
>Where do the above arguments fall apart?
I think the software will only allow itself to be re-installed once. Thereafter you will probably need to call MS with a reason why it is being moved to a third machine. Plus, I suspect that prior installs will cease being able to get updates and perhaps even disable themselves if one tries to run a Windows update and it returns a "cripple" instruction.
In the End, we will remember not the words of our enemies, but the silence of our friends - Martin Luther King, Jr.