Ramblings of an old Doc

 

Bad news for Comet (currently being sold to OpCapita). Microsoft is accusing them of producing counterfeit Recovery Disks for Vista and XP and shipping them off to be sold in their stores across the UK. Some 94,000 copies were made and sold.

"Comet’s actions were unfair to customers. We expect better from retailers of Microsoft products — and our customers deserve better, too." - David Finn, associate general counsel, worldwide anti-piracy and anti-counterfeiting at Microsoft.

MS does state its policy rather clearly:

“Reinstallation media, sometimes called a recovery disc, is typically included with a new or used PC purchase.  Because the software is already preinstalled, the reinstallation or recovery media is provided so that you can reinstall or recover the software if it stops working properly.  Recovery disks are not licensed to be sold separately from the PC they were shipped with; if you try to install software from a recovery disk on a PC other than the one it was originally shipped on, you may not be able to activate and/or use it.

Note: For some PCs, such as netbooks, the recovery media might be installed on a separate partition on the PC’s hard drive itself.  Refer to the documentation that came with your PC to locate the appropriate reinstallation/recovery media.” - http://www.microsoft.com/en-us/howtotell/Hardware.aspx#PCPurchase

However, I don’t know when that was posted publicly. It seems awfully specific to the case involved, and I couldn’t verify when that issue actually arose between Comet and MS.

Comet says that the piracy accusation is nonsense because although they are producing them, MS’s IP isn’t being threatened:

"[Comet]…sought and received legal advice from leading counsel to support their view that the production of recovery discs did not infringe Microsoft's intellectual property. Comet firmly believes that it acted in the very best interests of its customers. It believes its customers had been adversely affected by the decision to stop supplying recovery discs with each new Microsoft operating system based computer. Accordingly Comet is satisfied that it has a good defence to the claim and will defend its position vigorously." – http://www.itpro.co.uk/638119/comet-accused-of-counterfeiting-windows-cds

Comet feels it acted in the best interests of the customer. Their own, as well. These disks do have MS software on them, although I doubt it would be any different from a Recovery Disk you could make yourself.

If you bought a Recovery Disk from them, MS isn’t coming after you. MS claims to be sympathetic to end users.

Source:

http://www.infopackets.com/news/business/microsoft/2012/20120117_uk_retail_giant_sold_counterfeit_windows_says_microsoft.htm

http://www.itpro.co.uk/638119/comet-accused-of-counterfeiting-windows-cds

http://www.microsoft.com/en-us/howtotell/Hardware.aspx#PCPurchase


Comments (Page 2)
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on Jan 19, 2012

Sorry - double post...

on Jan 19, 2012

@kona.... Wise Registry Cleaner... it will defrag and compact your registry after cleaning it for invalid/no longer used entries

on Jan 19, 2012

I've been using Auslogics Registry Cleaner for years now. Is Wise any better?

on Jan 19, 2012

Before we go down that road, here's the link for that thread.....

on Jan 19, 2012

Thanks, G_Bison...saved me digging it up...

on Jan 20, 2012

MottiKhan
... My cousin had a hard drive crash and asked me to recover his data.  The recovery partition was damaged and I couldn't boot into the thing.  Even BartPE didn't let me in.  Luckily, my own generic recovery disk let me recover his wedding photos, kid's pics/videos, etc.

I can't make his laptop live again, being a different brand than mine.  Had HP given him a set of recovery disks, he'd probably have a running laptop again.  

I must admit that it makes a lovely paperweight.

Usually, when a computer have problem with a windows OS, i use my Linux USB memory stick ( 16gb with boot loader for knoppix and SystemRescueCD )...

For the curious, look at http://www.techrepublic.com/blog/10things/10-linux-rescue-tools-for-recovering-linux-windows-or-mac-machines/1458 ...

As for the paperweight thing, if you don't wish buy a new full version of a windows OS, you can always install linux on it, it is free... linux exist in plenty of favor but for newcomers, i think that the best is is Zorin OS ( based on Ubuntu )... you can choice a linux alike desktop, a win7 alike Desktop or a XP alike desktop...

As for game, you will need playonlinux... support plenty of windows games ( and Steam )... http://www.playonlinux.com/repository/?cat=1 ... The game that i love the most, sins of a solar empire, is not listed... it run well, multiplayer too, don't crash when the game reach 2gb but impulse don't work for update, so you need a windows OS... well, about update, it is not anymore true for these who have buy soase on Steam recently...

Personaly, i think that a multi OS computer with a good boot loader is the best choice... but if you don't wish buy again a version of windows, Linux is a perfect choice, certainly better that use a laptop as paperweight...

 

on Jan 20, 2012

As much as I like DrJBHL and tweaking my PC :  'Defragging' the registry or even 'better' the RAM is the most useless tuning-tip ever proclaimed by the makers of tuning tools.

on Jan 20, 2012

Why clone a fragmented registry? When you clone, clone the most efficient (and fastest) copy possible. RAM doesn't come into that at all.

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