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The challenge failed because Company C owned the correct number of licenses per machine and operated as a facilities house, renting 12 hours a day to A, 12 hours to B, which turned out to be legal. The software company said the companies were cheating, that two USERS shared the same licence.

The two companies involved (A + B) cooperated to set up a third company C to buy and operate the half the licenses they originally needed - in that case a render farm. I remember a heated debate on this about three years ago when a software company refused to discount bulk licenses.

Legally (though a moot point), if it is not powered up, its not even a computer. the machine is off and no other person is using the machine. You ARE using ONE copy on a SINGLE computer at A time, where in law a = one, singular time. You may use one copy of Anime Studio 5 on a single computer at a time.īy implication, you are not breaking the EULA agreement. Mykylr wrote:Seems I was wrong in this case. To "use" the Software means that the Software is either loaded in the temporary memory (i.e., RAM) of a computer, or installed on the permanent memory of a computer (i.e., hard disk, compact disk, etc.). You may use one copy of Anime Studio 5 on a single computer at a time.

The copyright restrictions of this EULA extend to any further updates, software patches, or bug fixes made available to you by e frontier, whether distributed on floppy disk, compact disk, or in an electronic format via download, BBS, forum, ftp, e-mail, etc. & e frontier and is protected by the copyright laws of the United States and international copyright treaty provisions. You own the compact disk on which the Software is recorded or fixed, but the Software is owned by Lost Marble, Inc. ("e frontier") for use only under the terms and conditions of this EULA, and e frontier reserves any rights not expressly granted to you. The enclosed computer program (The "Software") is licensed, not sold, to you by e frontier America, Inc.
