

- #AUTOCAD 2008 SOFTWARE FOR SALE INSTALL#
- #AUTOCAD 2008 SOFTWARE FOR SALE LICENSE#
- #AUTOCAD 2008 SOFTWARE FOR SALE FREE#
This license could still be enforced! Why? Because you accepted it.)
#AUTOCAD 2008 SOFTWARE FOR SALE INSTALL#
(However, most applications will only install after displaying the license, which you have to accept to continue to install it.
#AUTOCAD 2008 SOFTWARE FOR SALE FREE#
If you pay for something first, then have to accept the license then you're free to ignore that license. In that case, you are free to resell it to anyone you like, since you never agreed to this license to begin with. (Still, it gives the seller an additional protection.)īut most software will display a license after you've purchased the product. And no, you don't have to accept that license since you will accept it by continuing the purchase. If you buy the software electronically and they display a license to you before they sell it to you, then the license can be enforced. What is most important is when you had the chance to see the license. So, ultimately, I'd feel free to do it if the circumstances made sense, but we're never in a situation where it makes sense.Īt Techdirt there are a few articles that deal with this question but in general, it depends. For lesser-used utilities, by the time our user wouldn't want to use it, the version would probably be too old. We'd never sell Windows or Office or Acrobat or any other widely-used app or utility, since we use a mix of versions and sometimes have upgrades, and OEM Windows can't be sold w/out the hardware. Legally, it would depend on the actual license, but practically, if I did have some surplus s/w (maybe something that was never actually installed), I'd feel quite free to sell it.įor CALs, I wouldn't be surprised if there's something in the EULA that restricts resale.īut again, from a management perspective, it's not worth it for us to spend the time to figure it out. So the extra effort of verifying that something old isn't used on a lab machine in the corner and taking it out of the database isn't worth it. For software, we keep things in the inventory for a long time, just in case someone needs a specific version or we are able to get a competitive upgrade. At least with old hardware, it's sitting unused in a corner anyway, it's already been removed from inventory, and we can just post something on Craigslist or sell it internally and it's not a big deal. We don't usually have the time to sell surplus equipment, and we've never taken the time to sell surplus licences. I added "management" because for us it's partly a management issue.
