I have a beef along these same lines. While not technically pre-installing, the insistence that every PC sold come with an operating system (most often Windows) is almost as bad, IMO. At my last job, we had a volume license agreement with Microsoft and used it to install XP on all workstations that we bought from a local vendor. The vendor was forced to sell us a copy of XP (CD + key) for each workstation, however. We, naturally, never used those copies and installed XP from our volume license key, instead.
All one ever had or has to do is write down the CD key off of the stickers that are affixed to each of the computers at that business, and procure a single XP CD (either on one's own or from the hundreds in our wastebasket), and that person would literally have hundreds of fully-legit, untraceable and never-activated copies of XP. That would never be possible without the silly requirement that Windows be sold with every pre-built system. Perhaps someone should plug that huge and easy piracy loophole before making life more difficult for average users with fully-legit intentions.
Sure, either the vendor or our manager, or both, weren't following all of the rules and doing everything possible to prevent such a chance for piracy, but when someone puts roadblocks up, a lot of people are going to look for the easiest way around them. I suspect the same thing will happen with this pre-installed activation policy, as MartinBlank points out.
This post was edited by Osprey on Friday, February 25, 2005 at 19:58.
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