Microsoft can't sue you. They are not a party to the contract. Your license agreement is between your OEM and you. Don't you pay attention to anything.
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Goodbye Web Diary
http://margokingston.typepad.com/har....html#comments
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"GregRo" <webworm11@lycos.com> wrote in message news:422qe1F1gtokoU1@individual.net...
> On Wed, 4 Jan 2006 00:38:52 -0500, "PA Bear" <PABearMVP@gmail.com>
> wrote:
>
>>I've got a bridge I can sell you, too. A judge sold it to me.
>
>
> http://linuxjournal.com/article/5628
> If you find yourself paying for bundled proprietary software and don't
> actually install it, you can legally resell it no matter what the
> End-User License Agreement (EULA) says.
>
> You call that Judge liar? I just posted this informing people after
> reading those sites and with a lawyer comment. I know this is a
> Microsoft group and favor Microsoft. That does not mean Microsoft is
> always right. Remember the doj lawsuit? The may be violating that
> order. Internet Explorer was to remain a separate product
>
> I would tend to believe a lawyer over this newsgroup.
>
> Example
> If I had windows 98se OEM not installed.
> I could resale it.
> If Microsoft Sued me for reselling it.
> I could use that case because the Judge has already ruled that I could
> legally resell it,.
>
>
> Greg Ro
>
> Disclaimer.
> I am not accusing Microsoft of any wrong doing. No derogatory or
> rude comment were meant to Microsoft or anyone else.
>
>
> To off topic poster.
> Please stick on the Subject.
>
> To Other posters
> If you read the EULA. It always said the contract depends on the Laws
> of each country and may not be enforceable is all countries.
>
>
>
>
>