By
Joris Evers
Tuesday, April 25 2006 11:37 AM
URL:
http://www.zdnetasia.com/news/software/0,39044164,39353843,00.htm
Microsoft is taking its fight against software piracy to the desktop.
Starting Tuesday, the software maker will push out a test tool that checks
whether the copy of Windows a PC is using is properly licensed. It will be sent
to millions of people in the United States, United Kingdom, Malaysia, Australia
and New Zealand, Microsoft said Monday.
Following download and installation of the "Windows Genuine Advantage Notifications" tool, users of a
pirated copy will see alerts at startup, login and during their use of the
operating system. The alerts read: "This copy of Windows is not genuine; you may
be a victim of software counterfeiting."
Those who use a legitimate copy of the software won't see any messages,
Microsoft said.
People will be able to decline the tool download or uninstall it, said David
Lazar, director of the Windows Genuine program at Microsoft. They can also
suppress the alerts by right-clicking on them when they appear during the
running of Windows.
In addition, Microsoft this week is kicking off Office Genuine Advantage, which checks on installations of the
productivity package, which includes Excel and Access. The plan is to test out
the program initially in seven languages: Brazilian Portuguese, Czech, Greek,
Korean, Simplified Chinese, Russian and Spanish.
The efforts are part of Microsoft's antipiracy fight. Windows Genuine
Advantage (WGA) was launched in September 2004. Since last July, Windows XP
users have had to validate their operating system to be able to download additional
Microsoft software, such as Windows Defender, Windows Media Player or Internet
Explorer 7. Hackers, however, have repeatedly found
ways around the checks.
The alerts include a link that goes to a Web site that explains what people
with pirated versions of Windows need to do, Lazar said.
Earlier, Microsoft confronted people with the piracy checks when they
attempted to download such add-ons. The switch to desktop alerts was introduced
on PCs in Norway and Sweden in November 2005, then expanded to the Czech
Republic, Denmark, Israel, Poland, and Taiwan in February. Tuesday's move is a
further expansion of the trial program.
The WGA expansion is a precursor to the antipiracy features Microsoft is
building into Windows Vista, the update to the operating system expected in
January 2007. In Vista, certain operating system features will only work as long as it is a properly licensed copy.
Microsoft isn't pushing Windows Genuine Advantage Notifications out to all
Windows users, but to a random subset, Lazar said. It is using its Windows
Automatic Updates feature to deliver the tool. Automatic Updates, typically used
to deliver security fixes, is enabled on the PCs of most Windows users,
according to Microsoft.
To date, more than 150 million PCs have participated in the WGA program,
according to Microsoft. About 65 percent of users in seven countries have
accepted the Windows Genuine Advantage Notifications tool download, it said.
Microsoft's piracy checks won't prevent users from getting security updates.
Regardless of whether a system passes the genuine test, security updates have
been available to all Windows users, via either manual download or Automatic
Updates.