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Comments on: Microsoft to ease up on piracy check-ins

Antipiracy tool will reduce check-ins to biweekly, instead of after each boot-up, and will stop checking-in entirely later this year.

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Business Choice?
by ServedUp June 9, 2006 3:08 PM PDT
Of course they will ease their grasp on piracy check-ins. Thats a
given!

Its clearly a business choice. I don't think Microsoft really cares if
the average Joe Shmoe has a pirated copy of Windows on his
machine just as long as he continues to use it and just as long
as a majority of its consumer and business users still pay for it,
then its fine. From Microsoft's viewpoint they'd like to keep the
herd close not looking elsewhere.

Which also begs the question, what is the exact number of users
running a pirated version of Windows? I'm sure there are quite
alot, thats one of the reasons they're able to maintain their
empire. Because one day that user will pay for it someway or the
other. But If they suddenly include daily mandatory check-ins,
you'll probably see the number of Windows users drop. Who
wants the hassle? Their are other great Operating Systems out
there.

All in all in works out in Microsofts favor either way.
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Oi! When will they learn?
by Betty Roper June 9, 2006 3:31 PM PDT
If they're going to put software on our computers they have to tell us what it does -- including phoning home.

They shoot themselves in the foot every chance they get.
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They've learned already
by enwent June 11, 2006 9:30 PM PDT
...that no matter what outrageous thing they do, people will continue to use Windows. The answer to this, and to the NSA backdoor mentioned by another reader, is perfectly simple: use Linux!

http://www.pclinuxos.com/news.php
They've learned already...
by enwent June 11, 2006 10:37 PM PDT
that no matter what outrageous thing they do, people will continue to use Windows. The answer to this, and to the NSA backdoor another reader alluded to, is very simple: use Linux!

Microsoft won't change anything in the way they do business until it hurts them where they care.
And The Band Played Beleve Me If You Like
by Mr Shaun Warburton June 9, 2006 3:44 PM PDT
This was put on my systom under the edding of a "Critical Update", Critical for who? Certainly not for me.

If they had not have been found out, for the Sly sods, that they are. Do you seriously think that they would be making this statement today.
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Here's a permanet work arround
by zxocuteboy June 10, 2006 9:52 PM PDT
Came across this permanent fix to keep WGA from callin MS...

http://zxo.blogspot.com/2006/06/wga-notification-phones-home-during.html
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Here's a permanet work arround
by zxocuteboy June 10, 2006 9:53 PM PDT
Came across this permanent fix to keep WGA from callin MS...

http://zxo.blogspot.com/2006/06/wga-notification-phones-home-during.html
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The NSA Monitors Everything We Do Anyway
by john55440 June 11, 2006 9:27 AM PDT
Windows Genuine Advantage should be the least of our privacy concerns.
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Re: our privacy concerns
by rcrusoe June 11, 2006 9:01 PM PDT
The NSA can't monitor the files on your hard drive, this kind of program could.

But my concern is if there are malware programs out there using this MS phone home "feature" to access people's computers. It happened with the Sony rootkit.

And MS has proven over and over again they aren't the sharpest tool in the security shed.
I wonder . . .
by rcrusoe June 11, 2006 4:00 PM PDT
I wonder how many computers have already been compromised by malware programs that have already latched on to this MS spyware, like they did to the Sony rootkit?

Kind of makes you wish there were operating systems available that allowed anyone to inspect their code for this kind of sneaky stuff.

They could call them, let's think of a descriptive name. . . yeah, they could call it open source!
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