Hardware Manufacturers Gouging Customers 364
rahlquist writes "An article over at infoworld discusses that buying that used router on ebay may not be a good deal if Cisco can find its way to screwing you. What's next, buy a used Ford and pay Ford to transfer the license for the onboard computer's OS or face piracy charges if you continue to drive?"
Good news, bad news re: Cisco (Score:5, Interesting)
The bad news is that they are violating the gpl. :( I even submitted a /. article that is still pending after 2 days trying to deal with this. I need to recompile the kernel on one of the units I bought from them, but they won't release the kernel sources to me. *sigh*
Re:Good news, bad news re: Cisco (Score:5, Interesting)
That would be awesome... I can't think of a better turn of events to bring the issue to the common man than to have copyright laws prohibit buying and selling cars. We need to suggest this to the big automotive companies.
Re:Good news, bad news re: Cisco (Score:3, Insightful)
>the issue to the common man than to have
>copyright laws prohibit buying and selling cars
Huh? What does copyright laws have to do with that? Copyright laws doesn't prevent you from selling, say, a book you bought or anything else just becayse there is something that has a copyright "in" it. Copyright laws deals with making copies , doing public performace and such.
What is the issue is contract laws and any special contract you may have done at the
Re:Good news, bad news re: Cisco (Score:5, Funny)
What is the issue is contract laws and any special contract you may have done at the same time you purchased something but again, that has nothing to do with copyright laws.
That's a nice used car you just bought, but I don't believe that you have a legitimate license to use the software in the PCM. Just you wait until the traffic cop down the road realizes that he's stopped a pirate.
Re:Good news, bad news re: Cisco (Score:3, Informative)
And, if you will check out Section 109 [cornell.edu] youll see that whoever owns the copy is allowed to sell it.
Re:Good news, bad news re: Cisco (Score:4, Insightful)
They could also Lexmark you by having the parts 'expire' at certain times, requiring you to get the car serviced. Of course you won't know which part 'expired' because of the NDA and the DMCA that's preventing online distribution of the information, etc.
Re:Good news, bad news re: Cisco (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Good news, bad news re: Cisco (Score:5, Interesting)
Have any code in the kernel? Have any friends that do? (One of my roommates does, but he's busy enough as it is).
All you need is a kernel contributer whose code they're failing to redistribute to send them a warning and (if they don't respond) file a lawsuit against them. Ask for an injunction against their distribution of the infringing product, and they'll settle (presuming you ask something reasonable... say, the court costs you've incurred + release of the source) right quick.
Re:Good news, bad news re: Cisco (Score:5, Informative)
Read. [gnu.org] The official way on how to respond to a (possible) GPL violation.
Re:Good news, bad news re: Cisco (Score:3, Funny)
Microtik is located in Latvia. That would be the Latvia in the former Soviet Republic. Good luck with that injunction/threatening letter from a lawyer...
If the distribute their products in the US (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Good news, bad news re: Cisco (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Good news, bad news re: Cisco (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Good news, bad news re: Cisco (Score:2)
Re:There is no longer a benefit in buying used (Score:5, Informative)
What's the point? (Score:5, Interesting)
Not to mention that every time I sell old hardware, it is for the express purpose of purchasing new hardware. Everyone wins.
Re:What's the point? (Score:4, Insightful)
EIGRP may be an excellent protocol, likely better than OSPF, but for my money, OSPF is my choice because it doesn't lock me down to a vendor.
Errr no (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Errr no (Score:4, Interesting)
>from the corporate viewpoint, YOU are depriving
>them of their right to sell NEW hardware to that
>person
Ehh, yes, that is what RIAA and other "content providers" call theft isn't it (and all others that think copyrigth infringement equals theft). That is, you deprive them of a possible income, hence they lose something and it is theft. SO I guess soon they will argue second hand shops are actuall big illegal thievery shops. Sigh.
Re:What's the point? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:What's the point? (Score:5, Insightful)
Some managerial types have some very odd ideas about money. I knew a person who ran a motel back in the 1980's. He was charging $50/room in an area where the standard price was around $40/room. Needless to say he didn't rent very many rooms. A friend of mine was his accountant, and he suggested that the motel owner drop his prices to rent out more rooms. Mr. Idiot was horrified at the idea: "If I did that, I'd be loosing $10 on ever room I rented!" Apparently he had the fixed idea that when a room was rented he somehow deserved $50, so it was preferable to him to rent very few rooms at a higher price than to rent more rooms at a somewhat lower price. Eventually he went out of business.
Doubtless the same sort of idiocy is going on here.
The hardware manufacturers have always hated sale of used hardware. Using software licensing this way is just a club to try and smash the used hardware market, it has nothing to do with them worrying about their precious little software license being violated. One copy of software was bought, one copy of software exists. In this situation they have been paid for every copy of the software being used; no piracy is taking place. The entire "You bought a software license from us, and you can't sell that" line is total tripe. It may be legal, but it damn sure isn't right. The law needs to be changed to prohibit that sort of crap.
Re:What's the point? (Score:5, Funny)
I know I'd never buy a car that I couldn't resell later, and had to just throw away.
Re:What's the point? (Score:5, Insightful)
When it comes to bad business practices in general, yes. But the fundamental problem here is that the law is not being applied properly. When the law itself is wrong then it is not a market issue, the law needs to be fixed. In general "free market forces" cannot fix legal problems.
There is a legal doctrine called "Right of First Sale".
US CODE COLLECTION: TITLE 17 CHAPTER 1 Sec. 109 [warwick.ac.uk]
the owner of a particular copy or phonorecord lawfully made under this title, or any person authorized by such owner, is entitled, without the authority of the copyright owner, to sell or otherwise dispose of the possession of that copy or phonorecord.
If you buy a book you have a legally guaranteed right to sell that book. That is why used book stores are legal. The same goes for CD's, video tapes, DVD, computer games, paintings, sculptures, poetry, cassettes, EVERYTHING.
You bought one copy you have the right to have a garage sale and sell that one copy. Once the copyright holder has created and sold that copy he has made his profit and has no further claim upon that particular copy. It may be transfered freely.
The problem here is that they are playing games with the word "owner". It is intened to cover anyone who pays for the legal possession of that copy. They are claiming that you are not the owner of that copy.
There have been bills floating around congress to correct this and other related poblems by changing occurrences of "owner" to "rightful possessor". Unfortunately it hasn't gone through yet.
Another thing, as far as I can tell this "licencing scheme" isn't actually legal anyway, though I know that the courts have been treating them as legitimate. Copyright holders can ONLY licence the right to make copies, the right to distribute copies, and teh right to public performance. If they don't grant you one or more of these rights then NO LICENCE EXISTS. Nor does a contract exist unless they offer something of value and you INTENTIONALLY CHOOSE to accept that offer. You are never bound by any contract that you have not chosen to be bound by.
Once they sell you a disk or any other medium with the software on it the law already SPECIFICLY grants you the right [warwick.ac.uk] to install and run that software. You are perfectly free to reject the licence and install/use the software anyway so long as you are willing to pass on anything else they may offer in the licence.
Anyone who rejects my argument about linces can ignore all of that and just go back to what I said earlier about the bill floating around congress to fix the law by changing occurrences of "owner" to "rightful possessor". I don't know why it hasn't passed yet. Probably meddling from the copyright lobby.
-
It makes a lot of sense. (Score:3, Interesting)
People expect Cisco to be good. After all, it's Cisco. They've been making good stuff for years. So when something goes wrong, it's an anomaly.
On the other hand, when the new router from the new company that they've never heard of before has a problem, that's 100% failure to them.
Suppose you have 100 machines with 100 IBM hard drives and they've been working for 5 years and 2 drives crash hard today.
You wouldn't get a bad opinion of IBM hard drives from that.
Now, s
MTBF would be better (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:What's the point? (Score:3, Insightful)
But the other problem I have is that they "win" in any polls. I've never heard anything like this, and I've never met anyone who though McD's had the best bur
Selling used routers (Score:5, Insightful)
This isn't like Gamer PCs, where you _need_ a 4.77 GHz machine to keep up, or a Microsoft Office machine, where MS keeps making Office bigger and using the newer features of Windows, so you need to upgrade Windows, but you can't upgrade to Windows 2006 without upgrading to at least a 2GHz machine with 6.40GB of RAM. This is much more like the 486 Linux machine sitting in the corner acting as a DNS and DHCP server, or the Pentium 133 you're using as an X terminal.
But there are two popular reasons to sell a used router. One is that you're upgrading to a bigger router, and as you say, everyone wins including the router vendor. The other reason is that your dot-com died (or was bought by somebody who already had enough bandwidth in their offices) and you're selling the routers, the PCs, the chairs, the cubicle walls, and the t-shirts, and nobody's buying any new router except your happy E-Bay customer, and the router vendor loses a sale they might have gotten.
If all you're doing is hooking up a T1 and phone.. (Score:3, Informative)
There's not much use trying to shove Linux on a 486 when you can spend $200 and
Doing Something (Score:3, Informative)
All these failed dot-coms meant there was a very large supply of premium Cisco network kit available for pennies on the dollar. Sales of this used gear directly competed against new sales. Not only was Cisco facing customers
Hrmmm (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Hrmmm (Score:2)
Looks like, under the license agreement of the software, you cannot resell it to anyone at all. The only exception is from the article, in the case of mergers/acquisitions, etc, when all the assets of one company go to another.
Re:Hrmmm (Score:2)
Re:Hrmmm (Score:5, Informative)
It means you can't sell the software at all. You don't own it, and the license is not transferable.
Re:Hrmmm (Score:4, Interesting)
Doesn't seem right. I have a NetApp F720 that is getting a bit old and needs replacement. I've contact NetApp about a trade-in/upgrade. They want to resell the same software I already have on my existing filer. I've decided to go with External SCSI RAID (Adaptec), Fiber Channel HBAs, Linux, LVM and ReiserFS 4.0. I can probably get 80% of the performance for 10% of the cost. I'll buy two and get 200% of the redundancy for 20% of the cost...
Re:Hrmmm (Score:2)
Re:Hrmmm (Score:2)
Does that mean, since the software is non-transferable, that you retain the software license? As one who already holds a license for the software, can you then buy a
Physical vs ??? (Score:3, Interesting)
But the software is a "physical object".
It is a pattern of magnetic domains on a hard disk, or pits on a CD-ROM.
Why is that any less physical than the rest of the hardware?
Now, some may argue that "software" is different because it can more easily be copied than the rest of the hardware.
Here is a thought experiment:
If tomorrow, someone
Re:Hrmmm (Score:4, Insightful)
I've got an SGI in the garage I bought for $40. Original price on that model was more like $6000. If SGI told me that I had to pay $1250 to relicense Irix for it, and tried to convince me that this was a bargain (after all, it's 75% off!), do you think I'd agree? Do you think I'd pay it?
(Actually, I haven't touched the box in a year. I need to just get rid of it.)
Re:Hrmmm (Score:5, Insightful)
More importantly, when you bought it (perhaps from someone like CDW) you bought the entire thing, there wasn't even an option to buy just the hardware. Now they want to claim they are two different parts???!!! That's completely bogus; if CDW can sell it to you then you can sell it to someone else. Also, if you did decide to sell the hardware and then sell the software to someone else, the legal principle known as Right of First Sale pretty much says that you indeed can sell the parts, even if NetApp doesn't like it.
don't give them any ideas (Score:4, Funny)
Re:don't give them any ideas (Score:2)
Welcome to the software feudal system. be sure you give the bigger share to the lord of the manner.
Re:don't give them any ideas (Score:2)
Big Corporations (Score:2)
For large companies who require the support contracts, they will not usually buy equipment on eBay, but through their corporate supplier.
For smaller companies who would buy hardware second hand, they are the kind who can make do without supports contracts, and happily live in a legal "grey area".
Although it is morally stingy on the company's part, I don't think it will do too much to normal people, who will just use it "illegally".
Re:Big Corporations (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Big Corporations (Score:3, Insightful)
FREEZE! HANDS UP! This is the BSA! We know you have illegal routers that you bought 100% legally. We are coming in, and want everyone to lie flat on the ground away from the routers. Comply and no one gets hurt (well financially everybody except us gets hurt).
No?!?
-whew- (Score:2)
New Concept (Score:5, Insightful)
The terms of the license agreement are fulfilled - it's just that the on-site location is changed.
E-Bay (Score:2)
The companies have no idea what state the hardware is in so if say a controller has gone they won't to make sure they are covered.
On the software side however it is slightly different. I can understand them wanting you to pay some fee but prehaps not full price as a matter of good will. Then again as the old saying goes
Re:E-Bay (Score:2)
People have run into something similar when buying Sun gear - although Sun's license fees are "low" for single cpu systems. Basically the RTU only transfers if you buy the used gear from Sun or from an authorized Sun reseller.
In the Solaris 8 days, the RTU was free for systems capable of holding less than 8 CPU's, bu
Re:E-Bay (Score:2)
look, so what if it was bought off ebay, why does that matter? the item was bought originally and both the hardware and software was paid for upfront and I don;t hink that netapp have any moral reason to ask for any money. they just want money for old rope. it's been sold, let it go for fuc
Reselling the same thing. (Score:4, Interesting)
"$15,000 is still a good deal... If the ownership of a system changes, our contract says the software has to be relicensed."
If I give up my ownership, do I get my $15K back? Something tells me no.
Re:Reselling the same thing. (Score:3, Funny)
Even though your software license is nontransferrable, non-reinstallable and nonrefundable, you still get to keep it. Your $15,000 keepsake will be yours to cherish forever.
I suggest folding it up into a little square and putting it in a pendant. Give this to your wife as a gift. It cost about as much as a quality 2-carat diamond, and it has the same intrinsic value. She'll really appreciate this heirloom as a token of your affectio
Worst... policy... ever! (Score:4, Insightful)
When companies get greedy like this, it's all I can do to keep my calm. I'm not sure I agree that all information wants to be free, but used sofware licenses that are bound to hardware that is changing hands sure do.
caveat emptor (Score:3, Insightful)
as a side note, my father worked for pitney bowes (they sell shipping,mailing, and postage systems) for many years. they did the same with their shipping systems and software. of course, most old PB systems got traded in for newer systems, there were few in the 2nd hand market. so it's not just in the IT world.
Re:caveat emptor (Score:4, Interesting)
it's this kind of shit that got the doctorine of first sale pass for books
dave
Makes sense. (Score:2)
This makes perfect sense for the hardware companies, when you buy a high end router, you aren't paying just for the box, the metal, and the wires, but also for the IOS, tha code might not have a pretty front end, or a nice little start button, but it is software that someone made and without it the box is useless. Software companies do this all the time, makes perfect business sense for hardware companies to do the same.
Re:Makes sense. (Score:3, Insightful)
When you buy a Ford you don't just pay for the doors, the roof
So that does also make pefect sense to you?
For me not being allowed to transfer a software license still doesn't make sense.
An Alternative (Score:5, Interesting)
E.g. Used router for sale - $ 400
versus Used router for lease - $ 400 first month, $0 each additional month.
If you really need service contracts negotiated through me, then I do it for you at a reasonable hourly rate for my inconvenience.
Re:An Alternative (Score:2)
Cisco are heartless when it comes to this (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Cisco are heartless when it comes to this (Score:2, Informative)
You have to give Cisco some slack, ok, they expect to be paid for software, but come a security problem, the
Re:Cisco are heartless when it comes to this (Score:2)
I've had GREAT luck with Cisco on this (Score:3, Informative)
No pity (Score:5, Interesting)
I do read that sort of thing and that is why I will only buy from scum like Cisco if I have no other choice. And I usually do.
You can buy sync serial cards on the open market you know.
As for non-transferability, BS. They can probably refuse to sell a service contract on the used equip, perhaps even deny you updates. But "going after" you for possessing/using a piece of used equip would never stand in court. Doctrine of first sale allows copyrighted works to be sold by their rightful owner and EULAs are only valid in Virgina. So unless you have an actual contract with a company that specifically says you can't bring in a used box you are clear, and any such clause probably wouldn't stand in court if you were willing to spend the money to fight it. (i.e. one unit from eBay isn't worth a fight, 1,000 from an acquisition probably is.)
Re:No pity (Score:2)
I don't think they can go forcing people who buy used routers to pay the $15,00
Re:No pity (Score:2)
That's why you will start seeing contracts that will say "This contract is governed by the laws of Virginia" as they try to leech.
A stand needs to be made against this type of scumbag behavior.
How about phone companies? Or camera companies? (Score:2)
How about Nortel? Their systems all require software, and the licenses are entirely, 100% NON-TRANSFERABLE.
They've actually got a page on their website warning people that they should ONLY buy new equipment from authorized resellers, lest they be guilty of license violations. Ie, call us when you've got a question about that used Nortel phone switch, and not only
Re:How about phone companies? Or camera companies? (Score:2)
We got $190k because of this... (Score:3, Interesting)
We payed $5k for the unit (bid price), which came to probaly about twice that once all was said and done.
EMC wanted some obsene amount of money to license us the software to boot the puppy up, so it sat in from of our datacenter for a few months. Then a sister division bought started looking into an IBM Shark for their datacenter that we would be using part of. Rumor is IBM gave us a $200k discount on the shark for the trade in of our EMC unit.
So we made off with $190k from the deal! (kind of) Not a bad profit after our horror of EMC's license cost!
To top it off, the EMC has been sitting in front of our datacenter for an addition 6 months or so. I fegure they don't even want the unit. They just didn't want us using it.
That's my interesting experience with this.
-Pete
what if Cisco gives you new software? (Score:3, Interesting)
Why this is wrong (Score:4, Interesting)
But since you are required to pay for a support contract to get these updates, it is clear that the firmware is a separate product, even though it is delivered with the device, and the device will not operate without it. Note that many companies do not operate this way - these days you can download drivers for free for any PC you might purchase, via the internet. Even before the WWW became interesting for commercial purposes, you could generally call up their tech support, send them some money or make a credit card payment, and get the drivers shipped to you for a few bucks to cover a floppy (At the time, a not-inconsiderable amount of money when repeated frequently) and postage.
Therefore, since you must pay for updates to the software, a given update becomes almost an item of physical property. You have paid for it, and the right to use it. Hence, when transferring the device to the next owner, they should take ownership of that instance of that version of the code. It should not be considered simply "licensed" to them. After all, you paid for it, not just in some vague way by purchasing the device, but through the purchase of a support contract which is generally the only way to legally get access to these firmware images. Therefore, you should be able to transfer it, or your license to it, or whatever language you would like to use for the same thing here.
I should think it would be quite sufficient for the new owner to purchase a support contract and pick up. The answer to this "problem" is not relicensing fees, it's end-of-life. At EOL for a given product, current owners of the product should be able to purchase support for some given number of years, or commit to purchasing it, at a given price, and you will know how long you have to support the product. I think it's best to also commit to supporting the device at the current rate. As the device gets older, it will become less expensive to support, because more of the issues will be "known", and after end of life, you can refuse to add new features to the device without someone specifically paying you consulting fees for development.
This way, there is a finite lifetime to a product, you maintain your support costs, and let's face it; If someone has a support contract you will provide installation support to them as many times as they would like to move and reinstall it; This is really the only possible way to excuse charging anyone ANYTHING more than the recurring fees of the support contract when they purchase and employ a used device. If a company purchased an entire other company's assets, then necessarily their firmware licenses would come with it. Why, then, is it reasonable to charge a relicensing fee when someone purchases used hardware? It is not.
NetApp (Score:2, Insightful)
IBM has been doing this for years (Score:3, Informative)
With software, that is licensed, the rules are what ever the license agreement is.
Microsoft is doing the same thing, in that the software isn't a product seperate from the HW as well any more.
Laws that 'just seem wrong' won't be obeyed. (Score:5, Interesting)
How is it, in a nation where it is the will of the people that is to be represented and reflected in our laws and statues, our laws and statues reflect not the will of the people, but the will of an elite minority?
What more evidence do we need than this that ours is not a government by the people, for the people, but instead a government by those who have power, for those who already have it?
These businesses and corporations exist, and may operate only as we permit them to; they are by our permission.
We must revoke their permission. We must revoke their permission to buy laws which ensure their profit margins. We must revoke their permission to buy laws which mandate revenue where there ought not to be any.
What was it that the Justice Department lawyers told us, and the technology lobyist told us in their interviews; that it is naive, uninformed, and probably just childish of us to suggest that our government is in the pockets of corporations, and that corporations can "buy laws"?
What I say to them is that it is they who are naive. The corporate interests of today do not need to buy a single new law to oppress us, to wrong us, and to devestate us.
They do not, because our laws, our resources, our nation, were bought and sold to corporate interests long before any one of us were even born.
We are born into chains and we die under their weight.
If you struggle, it only drives those in power to bind us all the tighter. And they grin in delight. And they swim in their gold. And they build the flames higher.
It's not Cicso's fault... (Score:3, Insightful)
Go after the seller, not Cisco.
It certainly is Cisco at fault.. (Score:3, Interesting)
Linux Router Projects (Score:5, Informative)
I know I'm small potatoes in context to the article, but I wonder how many other large organizations, after having a experience simimlar to Mr. Tague's, will take a long hard look at a Linux based solution?
Re:Linux Router Projects (Score:4, Informative)
First sale doctrine... (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:First sale doctrine... (Score:2)
First Sale Doctrine Probably Applies Here (Score:2, Informative)
http://slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=03/07/13/155725 (Score:2)
This is just another example of Sharecropping [slashdot.org]. It's Cisco's right to do whatever they want with their [soft|hard]ware platform, as it is for Microsoft and other commercial [hard|soft]ware companies. Having said that, I think it's reason
Sun does the same (Score:2)
Actually you pay SCO, not Ford (Score:4, Funny)
eBay VeRO program (Score:3, Insightful)
Accounting problem? (Score:3, Interesting)
I Wonder what the IRS will say when somebody tries this?
$AVE your Money!! (Score:3, Insightful)
http://smoothwall.org/beta/ [smoothwall.org]
and download the latest package, smoothwall 2.0 Orient.
It's free. It works. You can find clunkers everywhere for free.
I refurb old clunkers and load smoothy on them.
I resell them and make a few $$$ for my pocket,
keep stuff out of the land fill and make some
customer very happy for saving them BIG $$$$....
Where's the Competition? (Score:3, Interesting)
So are they all winking at each other, and tacitly agreeing to screw the customer this way?
good thing sun doesnt do this.. that I know of (Score:3, Interesting)
One can download solaris for free from sun, as well as patches, drivers, ect.
This may be bad news, they might decide to ditch the free download eventually. that would really.. suck.
I would not buy a cisco product. get a wan card and a linux box. your probably better off.
just my $0.02
Simple solution to this problem (Score:4, Interesting)
Cisco Router Model X SN#12039okaj0123iasj Inc.
When you sell off the equipment, sell off the company. The software is licensed to that corporation. No need to relicense.
LK
Amazing... (Score:3, Interesting)
Licenses... (Score:4, Insightful)
Godspeed to the developers of alternative OSes for this hardware.
Is anyone really surprised? (Score:4, Interesting)
The vast majority of corporations out there have only one myopic goal in mind: Make More Money. They will pollute any river, strip any forest, injure or kill any worker or customer to further their mission. Basicly corporations are thinking "Fuck everyone and the magic hand of Adam Smith will save us". Unless better laws are created to protect the individual's rights in contracts, corporations will continue to screw any one they want.
I know,"Don't like the contact? Don't sign it." What happens when every new car dealer starts this or all the supermarkets require you use their "customer card" to buy from them. The RIAA would like to ban used CD sales. An EULA on all CDs would fix their problem nicely. The Magnuson-Moss Act needs to be revised to allow owner's rights to be transferred to subsequent owners and new laws are needed to heavily restrict conditions manufacturers place on goods during the sale. Of course this will never happen with all the money whores in Congress.
Can some say when the erosion of our rights will stop? I can't.
Welcome to Amerika.
pherris
(Oops, almost forgot: "Screw Flanders, screw Flanders, screw Flanders.")
This will stop once the accountants get wind of it (Score:5, Interesting)
IBM sometimes does the same (Score:3, Interesting)
A friend of mine had some dealings with a sleazy company in Montreal that tried to screw him by attempting to steal his work and then telling the police that he stole their work, leading to his arrest. They tried to complete the project using their IBM AS/400 computer. He knew that the OS on their computer was pirated, so he snitched to IBM.
These guys were in the business of buying and selling used IBM equipment. So IBM investigated, and discovered that a lot of the computers they sold had copies of the pirated OS. Seems they were buying the hardware without OS licenses. I don't know if that's because the original sellers had restrictions on selling the licenses, or just that they had transferred the licenses to other machines that they owned. But the upshot was that IBM started contacting the customers of this company, then started demanding license fees. Naturally, the companies were pissed at the sleazy sellers, since they assumed they were buying legit systems.
Ultimately, my friend was acquitted, and the sleazeballs went belly-up.
Get A Grip (Score:5, Insightful)
From the article:
"...when he contacted NetApp to purchase a maintenance agreement for the used system."
Two key words there: maintenance agreement.
First you have to remember that nobody is REQUIRED to provide that service. If you come to me and ask me to provide a service then I'm going to tell you what I will do and how much I want for it. If you don't like it then you can look elsewhere.
Anything else would be the same as you holding a gun to my head and forcing me to provide the service on your terms. That certainly isn't a fair business deal.
So you want to compare this to a Ford. Fine. Go get yourself a 96 Ford Contour with 100,000 miles on it from someone advertising in the local classifieds. Then drive or tow the thing down to your local Ford dealer and demand that they sell you a maintenance agreement for the same price as a current production model.
Go ahead, I'll wait.
Oh, you're back? Where's the car? Lemme guess, the guys at the dealership ended up pissing themselves from laughing so hard.
Maybe you should try again. Got that old Compaq 386 laptop out in the garage? Give Compaq/HP a call right now and tell them you want a 5 year maintenance agreement on the damn thing and you're not paying a penny more than $500 for it.
It must be because these are all corporations, right? We all know that anyone trying to do business and make a living is evil.
How about you? Would you want to operate the way Michael Tague expects?
Somehow I don't think that Mr. Tague would do business this way either if he were on the other side.
Cisco (Score:3, Insightful)
Having seen what little is available on this laughable process, I'd rather start my own router company than deal with the bullshit. $7000 to "inspect" a 7206VXR. They will only do the inspection during business hours (8-5M-F); the router will be powered down and disassembled during the process; only Cisco is allowed to be present at the inspection. And the best part: it's a binary process... it either passes or fails. No other information is provided -- i.e. why it failed and what we need to do it get it to pass.
What actually needs to be done in these cases (Score:3, Interesting)
That way there is no issue when you buy or sell the item. If the customer wants support or updates
The other poster who was talking about first sale has a very good bit of bargaining ammunition...as for the Cisco rep who made the other guy pay after the fact I would have also told that guy to f*** off. The hardware comes with an IOS image and the customer doesn't have to buy support from Cisco... they just won't get any new IOS images or help from Cisco.
This is not specific to Cisco (Score:3)
Someone reminds me when, let's say Microsoft, provided you support for software after you transfered it (illegally) to another computer. This just never happened to me or to any of my accuintances as far as I know.
Hence product activation from software vendors to enfore this part of the EULA.
The only mechanism hardware vendors can have is to track serial numbers (Cisco) or Service Tags (Dell) and enforce entitlement at the device level.
Re:Just like when you sell a car. (Score:4, Insightful)
Double taxation.
Not so. The car is not taxed, the sale of the car is taxed. When you bought the car, you paid a tax based on the value of the transaction. When you sold the car, the purchaser paid a tax based on the value of that transaction. Two separate transactions, two separate tax payments.
You are taxed on your paycheck and then when you invest your money and it generates income it is taxed again.
double taxation.
Wildly not so. You are taxed on your paycheck, then you are taxed on the income that your investment earned. The same money is not taxed twice. In fact, to a certain extent, if your investment results in a loss, you can exclude the amount of that loss from your taxable income.
I think that you would be hard pressed to find a situation where you paid the same tax twice for the same thing. I'm not saying that it doesn't exist...just fleetingly rare.
-h-
I am not a lawyer. I am not an accountant. I am not an economist. I am an engineer.