On Fri, 21 Nov 2003, Ben Steeves wrote:
On Fri, 2003-11-21 at 08:25, John Hodrien wrote:
Since, as I understand it, I'm not allowed to share a license of flash, I don't see how I can install it on a multi-user machine. What's anyone else doing?
Considering that Windows 2000 and Windows XP are just as "multi-user" as Linux, I don't see a problem, unless the Windows and Linux versions of the flash plugin have different licensing agreements.
I worded my original post poorly, since I was concerned not just with multi-user, but multi-machine. Since the license precludes a sole license supporting multiple machines, I don't see how I can image machines...
In the EULA, it says:
2a ...A license for the Software may not be shared, installed or used concurrently on different computers.
At what point does one enter into a license to use the software? If I install the software and someone else uses it, they've not agreed to the EULA.
It also states in the same section "You may install and use the Software on a single desktop computer". Does this preclude the use of imaging software with it?
There's also a separate licensing scheme that is for distribution of flash players within a company intranet that possibly covers this case, although even then it's not clear. I've contacted Macromedia for clarification.
jh