Parents, Admin rights and School policy
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Also I wonder how the school is licensing their image on the customer bought computer which likely are home edition.. even if not. Imaging rights are contained to the organization and since they do not own it, legally they have no imaging rights to that computer.
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I agree, sounds very likely that this is a school running more than one scam at a time.
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I think calling a scam is a bit harsh. The school was closed for school holidays at the time of the article, so comment could not be sought.
I don't agree with locking the admin account away from the devices owner. I do understand why it could have been done but that doesn't make it right.
Perhaps someone in the chain of fail missed a memo? Who knows. It's all speculation and conjecture at this point.
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@nadnerB said:
I think calling a scam is a bit harsh. The school was closed for school holidays at the time of the article, so comment could not be sought.
Making people buy machines with a license that isn't valid for them for Windows is the scam I'm referring to, at least one of them. You can't do that with student owned machines. And what happens when they are done with school and don't have a legal license on a machine that they paid for?
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@nadnerB said:
The school was closed for school holidays at the time of the article, so comment could not be sought.
I feel like the fact that they would shut down support for something like this under the guise of a holiday alone is a bit of a scam. Buy something and then find out there is no support, no response - and it becomes an international news item?
Doesn't add up. Too many "this isn't right" things going on. Declining to comment was the school's decision. Holidays make a convenient excuse. Do they really expect people to buy computers, with likely stolen licenses on them, that you can't even get information about using because the school finds it inconvenient?
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@nadnerB said:
Perhaps someone in the chain of fail missed a memo? Who knows. It's all speculation and conjecture at this point.
The important fact is... the school was contacted, given a chance to have a rebuttal and declines. That they made an excuse for declining honestly makes it worse.
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The only thing that I am wondering about is... what stops them from installing Linux on it and telling the school to shove it?
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@scottalanmiller said:
@nadnerB said:
I think calling a scam is a bit harsh. The school was closed for school holidays at the time of the article, so comment could not be sought.
Making people buy machines with a license that isn't valid for them for Windows is the scam I'm referring to, at least one of them. You can't do that with student owned machines. And what happens when they are done with school and don't have a legal license on a machine that they paid for?
By the authors own admission, they bought a recommended laptop. Not guns to heads.
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@nadnerB said:
By the authors own admission, they bought a recommended laptop. Not guns to heads.
That only applies if the license is fully legal, there is no undisclosed limitation and none of this was a surprise. That they bought the recommended one alone doesn't excuse anything, really. Maybe makes them foolish, but it is a student, afterall.
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@scottalanmiller said:
The only thing that I am wondering about is... what stops them from installing Linux on it and telling the school to shove it?
Program compatibility, vendor lock in...
The various Departments of Education (each state and Federal) all use the MS office suite.If they operate anything like us, they will have something like campus agreements to cover their licenses.
That being said, I would imagine that this would be a private school. No idea how they would go about their MS licensing.
The long and short of it is that Linux doesn't have a very bit foothold over here.
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@nadnerB said:
If they operate anything like us, they will have something like campus agreements to cover their licenses.
Wouldn't cover something that they don't own though, not part of the campus.
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And would a campus agreement cover them after they leave school?
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@nadnerB said:
Program compatibility, vendor lock in...
The various Departments of Education (each state and Federal) all use the MS office suite.I'm just saying... student could replace Windows on their own. It's THEIR laptop. Overcome the admin issue and move on.
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@scottalanmiller said:
And would a campus agreement cover them after they leave school?
Don't know, I don't work there.
I'm not defending either party. I do think one party has shot themselves in the foot while the other has shot their mouth off.