Are we talking Sysprep?mark21lancs wrote:As for engineers installing dodgy copies in shops etc BG. When I was working as an engineer we used to install windows with our key. Then delete it out of the registry once that the install was complete. Then when the customer started up the comp they had a windows prompt for a key to be entered before allowing access to user accounts. This was legal. Unless laws have changed this is what engineers should be doing.
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If so, there really is no need to even enter your own key. It's not to say the method you used didn't work - it obviously did, but there are better ways of doing it (even without the hassle of learning how to use the OPK/AIK).
Technically, it's all down to where the media was from that is the issue. If it's your media and their key, it IS piracy in the EULA in the UK. It would go like this: did the end user have media? No.....so you used yours. Did you leave them the disc? No. So technically, that is one of those situations where if the end user rang up Microsoft for support or reported you, you WOULD end up on the receiving end of anything from a letter to legal action.
In the interest of the OP, it's best left here. I know what the typical man in the shop/engineer/end user thinks about the rules and terms - I'm not stupid, really I'm not. But, I also know what constitutes a valid use of a product (in the eyes of the law). You obviously got away with it, so that makes it right - but lots of people don't and it can ruin their business reputation.
Hope you get sorted Chemfree, apologies for derailing your thread. I just wanted to make sure you don't end up in a worse situation than you were in. Best of luck!
BG