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May 16, 2001 12:00 AM

Where the Real Monopoly Is

Windows IT Pro
InstantDoc ID #20711
Rating: (1)
Microsoft takes a big risk with Office XP's forced registration

Microsoft Office XP aptly demonstrates what we knew all along: The Department of Justice (DOJ) was wrong in prosecuting Microsoft over its browser; the company's real monopoly is in Office. Office XP embraces two of the most user-unfriendly concepts the industry has seen since Lotus attempted to add copy protection to Lotus 1-2-3: a subscription-based licensing option and forced registration.

I understand that software piracy and the need to increase unit sales are driving Microsoft to implement some changes. However, putting the aims of the company's shareholders ahead of the desires of the customers seems rather shortsighted. Microsoft has strayed a long way from its roots as the producer of user-friendly software.

Subscription Model
In spite of Microsoft's claims to the contrary, neither subscriptions nor forced registration is very friendly to users. At first, a software subscription might seem like a good deal—you pay less to lease the software for a short period. However, in the long run, a subscription binds you to the vendor, forcing you to make future payments for software upgrades so that you can keep using the software. If you stop paying for upgrades, Microsoft restricts the use of your previously registered copy.

Registration Requirement
Forced registration, which is required to implement an Office XP software subscription, is equally unfriendly. The process generates a key that locks Office XP to a particular system configuration, which raises two concerns. First is the question of Microsoft's trustworthiness. Microsoft's earlier exploits in the area of online registration certainly don't inspire confidence in the company's concern for its customers' privacy. The Windows 98 and Office 97 registration process covertly extracted private system information that others could access without the user's knowledge or permission.

Second is the question of what level of vendor interference in your business is acceptable. Upgrade a hard drive on a system with an Office XP subscription license, and you need to contact Microsoft to reregister. Change out your NIC, and you need to reregister. Change your motherboard and processor, and reregister. Upgrade to a new computer, and reregister. Essentially, Microsoft is making you ask permission to keep using software you've already paid for each time you make a system change that's really none of the company's business.

Unfriendliness Factor
In a year, you easily might need to perform all the upgrades I've mentioned. Who wants the hassle of reregistering the Office software on each such occasion? What a fiasco an upgrade would be if this type of forced registration became prevalent in the industry. Reregistering one software product four times a year is unacceptable; reregistering all your software could easily take longer than performing the upgrade.

Fortunately, I don't expect to see mass forced registration anytime soon. Why? Because other software markets have healthy competition. Only in the Office area does Microsoft have such dominance that the company can risk this controlling behavior. Office XP's biggest competition comes from earlier Office releases, and Microsoft shouldn't underestimate that competition. Most users don't tap the full feature set of earlier releases, so whether Office XP's new features will be enough to entice customers to upgrade isn't clear.

Office eX Post Facto
What is clear is that Microsoft has provided a couple of good reasons not to upgrade. Although Microsoft claims that XP stands for eXPerience, from the customer perspective, the acronym seems more likely to stand for eXtra Profits and perhaps eXPendable. Ironically, exactly this type of behavior from Lotus let Microsoft Excel overtake Lotus 1-2-3 in the spreadsheet market. Forced registration might prove to be just the opening Sun Microsystems' inferior (but free) StarOffice needs to gain a foothold in the industry.

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Comments
  • Anonymous User
    7 years ago
    Apr 25, 2005

    Bought for $520 in June 01 Office 2000 Value Pack. As part of the deal, if we registered with our name & address, microsoft offered a free copy of xp. Put this on a new computer today when we updated with XP os. It first demanded a previous version, so I cancelled registration & went to put the previous version on, then realised I could just feed the old disk to the machine to show it the upgrade was legit. So it installed & when I opened word, it demanded activation. I put the activation codes in, and it rejected them!
    It said the program had been used twice - incorrect, but obviously microsoft has put registry keys in. Now today is Australian Veterans Day (Public Holiday we call ANZAC Day) and I can't activate word until I call microsoft tomorrow. Only I work the same hours they are open, so how am I supposed to do that. And I'm left with nasty registry keys in a brand new computer cos the old me computer died. Thanks for nothing microsoft.

  • Randy Glasnapp
    10 years ago
    Jan 18, 2002




    Much Ado About WPA


    Thank you for Michael Otey's Editorials: "Where the Real Monopoly Is" (June 2001) and "Windows Product Activation: The Enemy Within" (August 2001). I can't remember the last time I responded to an editorial, but Michael has perfectly described the problem with Windows Product Activation (WPA).


    In the small network that I oversee, I save valuable time if I reload the OS and applications rather than try to fix a user's unstable system. Microsoft's plan is unworkable in the real world, unless the company can guarantee stability. With all the hardware and software choices we have today, we're years from that guarantee. I guess I need to start testing Linux, and thank goodness one of Corel WordPerfect's strengths is its file-conversion features. I've always thought Microsoft was an aggressive competitor*a consequence of a capitalist system*and I've supported the company. But Microsoft's software registration scheme is just like calling its customers crooks, and I don't know too many businesses that insult their customers and survive in the long run.


    Randy Glasnapp

    glasnappre@compuserve.com

  • cf
    11 years ago
    May 29, 2001

    P.P.S.

    I give the new registration technology 3-6 months before crackers write a shim to fake automatic authorization protocols. Now the question is what MS has hidden in there to violate your 5th Amendment rights (for those of you who consider your computer an extension of your person). "Reporting IP z.y.x.w, BIOS ID #... as both a pirate and cracker to office of federal computer crimes prosecutor."

    Of course the real crackers will consider MS to have declared war and fuzz that evidence to useless as well. A really nasty way would be to simply spread the shim by virus so that everyone has it while lifting and spreading codes. Did you intentionally try to pirate or not? I'd keep a real close eye on physical receipts to confirm your innocence.

  • cf
    11 years ago
    May 29, 2001

    Unfortunately Microsoft is simply the first really visible vendor to begin the return to the old Big Blue licensing scheme. Check out the plans by other major vendors with the horsepower to implement this sort of licensing right now. I think the software industry needs to more closely think through the social dynamics before implementing this more fully. This is the first time large numbers of end-users and home consumers will be subjected to the pains of licensing intellectual properties via regular royalties payments rather than only back office corporate lawyers wrangling over such issues.

    Nevertheless you will notice even game manufacturers are luring consumers into accepting this model again via the promise of patches and connectivity. The PC software "sale" has been a rare exception to the rule which was caused by software companies having too many customers to do on-site visits as they did in the mainframe-only days of yore. That exception has been dealt with a few new uniform state laws legalizing shutdown via Internet.

    P.S. For those who haven't been watching the software industry backroom comments, it will get worse. The industry-wide ultimate financial model since the early 1990s has been to charge for software based on metered use much like the power company does for electricity. Both your PC and any servers you use would report "units" of usage via the Internet to billing-automatic payment companies on a monthly basis.

    There is a certain logic to rewarding programmers and software companies in proportion to the usefulness of thier products. Perhaps Office 2010 won't be as useful as Microsoft thinks, especially in proportion to other software vendor products. However, the scary part is that you will have many external factors influencing your actual usage with effects much like a cold winter on your heating bill.

  • dh
    11 years ago
    May 28, 2001

    I am under direction by our CIO to investigate ways of operating totally sans Microsoft. We've had enough of their tactics. Give it away until the competition folds, then tighten the squeeze on the customers' wallets.

    Our core business apps run on midrange systems, and our NOS is NetWare. Looks like the desktops are going to be either Mac or Linux...

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