Microsoft: No Shutdown Switch for Office 2007

Nov 22, 2006

Microsoft has no plans to add a controversial Windows Vista antipiracy feature 
directly to its Office 2007 suite, but will consider offering it as an add-on
system, the company said today.

In an e-mail through its public relations firm, Microsoft said that although it 
has not built its
Software Protection Platform
(SPP) into Office 2007 as it has in Windows Vista, it is considering adding it 
to its
Office Genuine Advantage
(OGA) Program, a validation system that checks whether a user has a legitimate 
copy of the software.

How the Vista Feature Works

Windows Vista's SPP feature requires users to activate the software with a 
valid activation key within 30 days of purchasing the OS. If that does not 
happen,
the OS goes into reduced-functionality mode, which lets users browse the Web 
for an hour before the system logs them out. To browse more, users must log
in again, but they will have only another hour before the process repeats 
itself.

Office 2007 has a product-activation feature that acts similarly to SPP, but it 
is not based on validating the legitimacy of the software and it is not
new to the application, Microsoft said. Office has had a product-activation 
feature since Microsoft Office 2000 SR1. Product activation requires the system
to be activated with a product key after being started 25 times. If it is not, 
the application will enter reduced-functionality mode.

Office Checks Will Be Mandatory

Microsoft is going to make validation checks for Office 2007 mandatory for 
users of Office Update through its OGA program. Starting in January, users of
Office Update will have to validate that their Office software is legitimate 
before they can use the service.

OGA is a sibling program to Windows Genuine Advantage (WGA), launched in July 
2005 as a program that automatically checks a user's version of Windows to
ensure it is not counterfeit or pirated. WGA evolved into SPP, becoming an 
inherent part of Vista.

Microsoft's antipiracy checking systems
have been unpopular
from the start, meeting with some resistance from users. WGA was especially 
unpopular at first when early bugs in its checks were tagging legitimate 
software
as counterfeit or pirated.

Microsoft also was forced to turn off a notification feature in WGA that sent 
information to Microsoft from users' PCs when some complained that the feature
was acting like spyware.

http://www.pcworld.com/article/id,128007-pg,1-RSS,RSS/article.html

Vikas Kapoor,
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