hedwards: I'm pretty sure that it's legal to sell them, every manufacturer I've bought a computer from since MS stopped including discs has offered discs for cash.
Namur: It's legal to burn Windows OS's on disks and go about selling them at an arbitary price, regardless of what price might be ? I really don't think so. I don't doubt for a minute that manufacturers will willingly, and happily, sell them for cash though.
The discs aren't useful without activation and MS is the party that controls activation. back in times of yore you'd be furnished with the same disc so that you could reinstall.
hedwards: I'm not really sure what's so special about Comet that MS is trying to go after them.
Namur: They were caught doing it and there's enough evidence of them doing it repeatedly to the extent of one and a half million quid in profits ? ;)
They made profits providing something that MS no longer provides. It's not really any different from when shops charge to remove adware from computers that the manufacturers insist on larding the computers up.
The discs themselves are useless without either activation or a crack. Anybody wanting the later has more than a few places to find them, and MS ultimately controls activation of the copies.
As I've said before it's common practice for major OEMs these days to charge for replacement discs, I'd love to know what specifically it was that mad MS start caring. The price is in line with the ones I've seen for replacement discs.
hedwards: And yet whenever I buy a computer they offer to sell me the recovery discs. It's not like I'm buying from small fly by night systems integrators either. If it weren't legal you'd think that MS would have started enforcing their rights years ago.
Really the whole situation is bullshit and ultimately MS' fault.
wodmarach: The OEM has the right to sell the disc thats the thing they have a contract with MS to burn and create their own discs Comet doesn't
I wasn't aware that Comet doesn't sell their own machines. Yes that would make a difference and probably enough of one for MS to win the suit. Although the whole thing is stupid seeing as MS is the party that activates the discs and anybody wanting to use the discs would need a valid key.