In the U.S. they're specifically enforcable in some states, in others it's
unclear whether they have any weight or not.

> >    nor may
> >    nor may you permit any Device to use, access, display, or run the
Product
       ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^              ^^^^^^^
> >    or Product's user interface, unless the Device has a separate
          ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
> >    license for the Product.

So you're arguing that VNC does not display XP's user interface?  I don't
think that would stand up in court (or to a BSA audit.)

-----Original Message-----
From: Malcolm Turnbull [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Wednesday, December 12, 2001 10:18 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: Timeout Problem with XP - illegal??


Ah but if you are using VNC remotely then by definition you can't be using
XP localy ..
As NT is single user only (Terminal services is a software add on...)
And therfore the Workstation Licence is transferable to the VNC client

So you don't need to worry about it..

Also under English Law licences like that are considered a pile of crap...
(and not legaly binding)
just like those stupid 'If you open this envelope you except the terms and
conditions inside...'
It's called entrapment.
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