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AbuMubarak
27-07-05, 02:58 AM
Update: Microsoft requires Windows piracy checks
Users must validate OS before downloading updates or new content

News Story by Elizabeth Montalbano
http://www.computerworld.com/computerworld/images/clear.gif

JULY 26, 2005 (IDG NEWS SERVICE) (http://www.idg.net/) - Microsoft Corp. this afternoon went live with a program requiring customers to validate that they are running legitimate copies of the Windows operating system before they can use Microsoft's download services. The Windows Genuine Advantage 1.0 program ensures that customers using Windows Update, Microsoft Update for Windows and the Microsoft Download Center run a program that checks that their Windows operating system is genuine before they can download updates or new content from those services, said David Lazar, director of Genuine Windows for Microsoft.

The company has been testing the program since September and has validated more than 48 million systems so far, Lazar said. Until today, the program has been voluntary.

Customers who discover they have a counterfeit copy of Windows through the program either will be given a free version of the operating system or can purchase it for a discounted price, he said.

To get a free version of Windows, a customer must fill out a counterfeit report identifying the source of the software, provide a proof of purchase and send in a counterfeit CD of the software. If customers don't have all of that information, they can still fill out a counterfeit report and receive a copy of Windows XP Home Edition for $99 or a copy of Windows XP Professional Edition for $149, Lazar said.

Windows XP Home normally sells for $199 and Windows XP Professional Edition usually costs $299.

The move to lock out pirated copies of Windows from the download sites is part of Microsoft's effort to fight software piracy, which is a major issue for the software vendor.

Bonnie MacNaughton, senior attorney in the legal and corporate affairs department of Microsoft, said the company estimates that more than one-third of all copies of its software are counterfeit, based on a recent joint report released by the Business Software Alliance and research firm IDC. The study found that 35% of software worldwide is pirated. In North America alone, the piracy rate for software is 22%



"We consider that to be a staggering number," MacNaughton said.

One issue the software maker faces in fighting piracy is that many users don't know that their copy of Windows is illegal. Windows Genuine Advantage allows customers to solve this problem in a few minutes through the automatic validation, Lazar said.

The Windows Genuine Advantage checking mechanism is anonymous, and includes an ActiveX control on the client side and the Windows Product Activation service on the Microsoft side. During the testing process, a user had to install the ActiveX control and enter the Windows product key, which on new PCs bought with the operating system is typically found on a sticker affixed to the PC. However, providing a Windows product key is no longer required in the live program, Lazar said.

This is not the first time that Microsoft is checking whether installed copies of Windows are legitimate. Windows Update already checks for certain volume license keys that are known to be used illegally to activate copies of Windows.

Microsoft also has a Web site, www.howtotell.com (http://www.howtotell.com/) , providing customers with information on how they can discover whether they have a genuine copy of Windows, Lazar said.

While counterfeit copies of Windows will be prevented from downloading updates, Lazar said Microsoft is not including security updates in the lockout. Even customers who do not check their copies of Windows for authenticity will be allowed to download security updates through Windows Update, Microsoft Update for Windows and the Download Center, he said.

"Those are available to all Windows users with or without validation," Lazar said. "We think of it like public health. We want to make sure no one gets infected by another system on the Internet because of our program."

AbuMubarak
27-07-05, 03:00 AM
Get a Linux System

No spyware
No Adware
No Viruses
No Bill

And its totally YOUR system for YOUR computer

K@M
28-07-05, 01:05 AM
Looks like Windows Downloads is about to lose 50% of its userbase..

nami
01-01-06, 08:27 PM
I wonder what this option is for? :P

http://img421.imageshack.us/img421/1415/disable9dk.th.png (http://img421.imageshack.us/img421/1415/disable9dk.png)

Refugee
03-01-06, 10:20 AM
I wish there was an alternative for oyster cards as well - the only thing available is paper ticket but that cost a bundle - i think these oyster is going to be for bad news for us news ! (May Allah give me enough for me to buy a car)

AbuMubarak
25-01-06, 12:03 PM
Microsoft defends decision to give up search data
The company maintained that it is committed to protecting customers' privacy

http://www.computerworld.com/governmenttopics/government/legalissues/story/0,10801,108029,00.html?source=NLT_AM&nid=108029

JANUARY 24, 2006 (IDG NEWS SERVICE) - Microsoft Corp. is on the defensive over its decision to hand over search data to the U.S. government, saying the company would never compromise the privacy of its customers.

On the company's MSN Search Weblog, Ken Moss, general manager of MSN Web Search, said that Microsoft did not divulge any personal user information when it provided the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) with data from its search service.

Moss said that the privacy of Microsoft customers is "non-negotiable" and the company aims to continue to protect customer data and information. However, Microsoft thought it best to cooperate with the government's subpoena, handed down about six months ago, but the company did so in a way so it would not violate customers' privacy.

"At MSN Search, we have strict guidelines in place to protect the privacy of our customers data, and I think you’ll agree that privacy was fully protected," Moss said. "We tried to strike the right balance in a very sensitive matter."

Microsoft and other search engine providers Yahoo Inc. and America Online Inc. have come under heavy fire from both Internet users and privacy advocates for complying with a U.S. government subpoena of their Internet search records. The DOJ said it needs the information to defend the Child Online Protection Act (COPA), which it is trying to revive after it was struck down by the U.S. Supreme Court two years ago.

Specifically, Moss said that Microsoft provided data that allows the DOJ to see how frequently some query terms occurred, but does not allow the government to look up an IP (Internet Protocol) address to see what information was queried and cannot look for users who searched for certain terms.

"We produced a random sample of pages from our index and some aggregated query logs that listed queries and how often they occurred," Moss wrote on the blog Friday. "Absolutely no personal data was involved."

Search engine leader Google Inc. has so far refused to hand over search information to the DOJ, citing several reasons, including concerns about violating its users' privacy, disclosing trade secrets and facing an undue burden in assembling the demanded information.

Poll results published today by The Ponemon Institute LLC found that the majority of Internet users are on Google's side, and a good number would stop using the company's search engine if it complied with the government (see "Survey finds solid opposition to release of Google data to feds").

More than 56% of respondents to a poll of 1,017 adult U.S. residents believe that Google should not hand over information about search queries to the government, according to the institute, which conducts research on corporate governance, data protection and privacy compliance.

Requests for an interview with Moss or other MSN representatives through Microsoft's public relations (PR) firm Waggener Edstrom Inc. today were denied. Beyond Moss's blog entry, the only information Microsoft provided on the matter was a statement submitted by e-mail through a PR representative.

"We take the privacy of our customers very seriously," the statement read. "We did comply with [the government's] request for data in regards to helping protect children in a way that ensured we also protected the privacy of our customers."

Abu Hurairah
26-01-06, 03:35 AM
Sorry bro Abu Mubarak for sidetracking on this MS issue but anyone wishing to get a little insider info. on the Oyster travel card issue feel free to PM me and insha'allah I shall inform you on one or two things insha'allah you just might like to know. :rubeyes: :(

I wish there was an alternative for oyster cards as well - the only thing available is paper ticket but that cost a bundle - i think these oyster is going to be for bad news for us news ! (May Allah give me enough for me to buy a car)