Microsoft Expands Windows Anti-Piracy Program

edited October 2004 in Science & Tech
When it launched its "Windows Genuine Advantage" pilot program in September, Microsoft Corp. was hoping 20,000 customers would opt into the voluntary program, via which Microsoft checks whether customers are running counterfeit copies of Windows.
But by a little over a month later, 828,000 customers had opted in, Microsoft officials said Wednesday. And they did so with no real incentives, admitted David Lazar, director of Microsoft's Windows client product management group. What led to the unexpected boon? "People want to know if they are running genuine software," Lazar said. "And people really were interested to find out if there were any benefits for opting in." Until Thursday, there were no tangible benefits to participating in the Microsoft Genuine Advantage program. But now, users who agree to participate in Microsoft's program will be offered up to $390 worth of software for free or reduced prices.
pffft, people didn't do it because they wanted to know if they had legitimate software, they had to do it because certain updates required it. What a bunch of PR spin. -KF

Source: eWeek

Comments

  • entropyentropy Yah-Der-Hey (Wisconsin)
    edited October 2004
    Wonder if they can actually tell, or not really. Sorta like the whole "EssPeeToo will disable-itize yar counterfitted XP!" debacle, which never ... really ... worked ... lol.
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