Odd... that wasn't the licensing package we are being quoted. For us it will simply be # of seats (for servers # of processors). So we can have 500 computers if we sell 200 and buy 200 more we put it on them... no fuss no muss, no authentication process, etc.
I would suspect that it does not apply to site licenses as they are typically for a set number of computers rather than specific computers
However since the VAST majority of money lost to piracy is by Non- US piracy and the second area is people buying once cd and putting it on every machine they ever own. I can see this policy targetted at the "home" audience.
That being said, I can see the "truth" in a new motherboard = a new computer. Now I personally believe a licenses is a license. Therefore if you have the software on 1 machine you can switch it to as many single machines as you like so long as no more than 1 machines has it at a time. My guess is that if challenged this idea will fail in many states.
GE-Raven
My problem with the whole software EULA is the way the software companies are changing the rules of copyright. If I buy a CD or a DVD or an old fashioned LP I can listen to it on any player in the world that I have access to. I can loan it to my friend. I can sell it on E-Bay.
Somehow copyright when applied to software is used to say I don't own what I bought. The creators still own THAT copy and can control what I do with it. Typically they claim that I can't loan it, sell it or move it to another computer. They also claim the right to take MY COPY away if I don't follow their rules.
Why can't I take my spare copy of Windows 98SE and loan it to a friend? Why can't I take the Windows off of one computer (delete it that is) then install it on another? Why can't I sell it on E-Bay without fighting Microsoft in court? Why do the rules of copyright suddenly change because it is software? Why does the RIAA think that they should be able to rewrite the rules by putting DRM on a CD? Why are
our politicians letting this happen instead of slapping these predatory companies silly for presuming the power to create laws?