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Windows Refund Day II

pbody writes "Sorry if this is rehashing an old topic, but I was looking for advice on how to try to get a refund for the copy of XP that is coming with the laptop I just bought when I came across this on LinuxJournal about windowsrefund.net. They are organizing "Windows Refund Day II" on January 23, 2003 -- which coincides with the LinuxWorld Expo in NYC. Knowing how the first refund day turned out, how many out there are going to the Expo and are thinking about participating? For that matter, has anybody had any luck at all getting a refund from a vendor lately?"

10 of 587 comments (clear)

  1. Refund for XP by randomErr · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Sorry if this is rehashing an old topic, but I was looking for advice on how to try to get a refund for the copy of XP that is coming with the laptop.

    Sell it on E-bay to someone who wants it.

    --
    You say things that offend me and I can deal with it. Can you?
  2. Re:Changing the licenses and refunds.. by daoine · · Score: 5, Interesting
    as its paid up front from the OEM to Microsoft it blurs how refunds can be obtained. Its like car insurance, you have it, you pay for it up front, the fact that you don't have a car crash doesn't mean that you can say it wasn't used and ask for a refund.

    But there's a flaw in your logic. In your situation, you still owned and were capable of using the car. Imagine you sold the car and bought a bike. You don't still have to pay car insurance, and insurers are generally required to give you a refund -- prorated for the time that the car was in your possession.

    The same should also be required for Microsoft -- even if it meands removing the OS at purchase time to avoid the situation altogether.

    Personally, I think it would be much easier to move to a service model -- but the cost can't come at purchase time. It has to come at activation time. If the first thing you do is reformat, there's no service charge at all.

  3. OEMs & XP Home by OsoLoco · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I ran into an annoying problem similar, myself. I purchased a Compaq laptop last year, and they wouldn't let my buy it without an OS. So, I took the lowest priced option, XP Home, but never used it, just got the machine, installed linux and was happy. Last week, I ended up needing XP, but I didn't want to wipe my linux partition. The default recovery disks repartition AND reformat the drive rather than just being a copy of XP home + additional installers. So, since I had a valid activation key and license with the machine, I figured I could just install from a different XP home disk. No dice, apparently OEMs are given activation keys that only work for their installs. Both Compaq AND Microsoft said that if I wanted the partitioning and removal of the OEM stuff, I'd have to buy another copy. How irritating, since I HAVE a valid license. Ended up having to use the recovery disk after backing up my linux partition, and then uninstall AOL, COMPUSERVE, etc. etc. Big pain in the arse.

  4. My experience with Fujitsu by OmniVector · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I purchased a laptop from Fujitsu. Naturally it came with Windows XP, so I requested a refund. After nearly 2 weeks of back and forth emails of me requesting a refund, and pointing them to various websites about the issue, and my claims against the EULA to use windows I got nowhere.

    Their argument was i agreed to THEIR EULA which states i can't get a refund, when i purchased it. Either they were ignorant or refused to give a refund under any circumstance. I would have contacted a lawyer but it just isn't worth my time.

    --
    - tristan
  5. Toshiba's Policy by Stryker2 · · Score: 5, Interesting
    I recently purchased a Toshiba notebook. It was sealed in cellophane, with a label that declared that the complete system is a bundle and that Toshiba would not honor requests for partial refunds of the system price for components that were not used/desired. The customer was directed to return the system to the place of purchase for a comnplete refund, if desired. It was my thought that this policy was directly implemented in respone to customers that might wish a refund of the cost of Windows.

    And most vendors around here charge a 15% restocking fee for notebooks, so you can see how far you would get.

    As has been suggested before, if you do not want a given item (Windows or whatever), then either look for a system that does not include it, build your own, or have someone build one to your specs. This will enable you to get exactly what you want and no more at a price you are willing to pay, and it will also provide an incentive for the manufacturers to provide systems that meet your desire so that they can get your business.

    I consider the refund day concept to be little more than a minor publicity prank and of little practical value. What might make it beneficial would be for a group of users to purchase a product, refuse to accept the EULA, and then demand refunds per the instructions included in the EULA (supposedly this has happened with the people that would be participating in the refund day). Microsoft would probably point the users to the vendor, and the vendors would probably stand on their return policies. An ambitious and capable law firm might be able to make a case out of this, but the outcome would probably be along the lines of prohibiting vendors from charging restocking fees on items where the customer refuses to accept the EULA unless it was presented prior to purchase. The law firm wouyld also rack up fees to be paid by someone, probably the vendors. This would not amount to a significant change.

    If you REALLY want to make a change in the marketplace, don't give your money to companies that you do not agree with or whose policies you dislike. If enough people do this it will force changes in the market. And if not enough people do this to make a difference, then you need to accept that you hold a minority viewpoint and are a niche customer.

    IANAL, and you should pay for legal advice rather than believe anything you read here.

    --
    Bother, said Pooh, as he called in an air strike.
  6. Re:And me! And Gateway by GeekZilla · · Score: 5, Interesting

    My friend ended up buying a Gateway PC and I told him to go back to "Gateway Country" to get his refund because he wanted to install Windows 2000 Pro-Not ME. The schmuck's at the GW store were clueless and refused to honor the EULA. A quick trip to the Washington State Attorney Generals Online Consumer Complaint Form and Corporate Gateway was calling him! They ended up (in an effort to keep a Gateway customer happy) paying him the price he paid for Winodws 2000 and the amount that I charged him to install it on his machine. The check he received from GW was around $500 US! If they had simply honored the EULA, GW would only have been out about $90? $120 tops. AND he got to keep all the software CD's that came with the PC. I don't think they ever really understood that he was entitled to the refund under the EULA.

    --
    Veritas patesco per quaestio questio. Truth is revealed through questions.
  7. wait a minute... by gabec · · Score: 5, Interesting
    "Knowing how the first refund day turned out..."

    err... how *did* the first refund day turn out?

  8. Re:Changing the licenses and refunds.. by zoward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Personally, I think it would be much easier to move to a service model -- but the cost can't come at purchase time. It has to come at activation time. If the first thing you do is reformat, there's no service charge at all.

    Sounds great, but why would Microsoft buy into this? They currently has a stranglehold on the PC industry, so they can force the big PC makers to pay for the service up front, and they get their cut no matter what OS you choose to run on your laptop after you buy it.

    About the only reason the big PC makers would consider this is that they could charge less by forcing the user to enter a CC# the minute they register their PC, thus making their PC's look cheaper to the end user. I can envision this being a nightmare to support. For example, I buy a Dell PC, bring it home, and instead of paying the $199 up front for 3 years of MS OS rental, I format the drive and put, for example, the Plan 9 operating system on it. Suddenly the modem goes. Does Dell customer service want to troubleshoot every existing OS I can install on their hardware? Do they want to "take my word" that the problem is hardware-related and not a Plan 9 driver problem?

    More likely, a casual end user will skip the $199 registration and install their old version of 2000 or WinME/9x on the box - something Microsoft would very much not want to see happen.

    --
    "Can't you see that everyone is buying station wagons?"
  9. Re:I don't get this "refund" thing. by vidarh · · Score: 5, Interesting
    Actually, the manufactorers are NOT free to choose which pieces their system is made up of. Most countries have laws restricting when tying of two separate products is legal and not. In this case a bare computer and Windows are clearly in the general case two separate products, as both are available for sale separately from a wide range of manufacturers.

    In general tying laws restrict when a manufacturer may tie in two products without offering the individual products for sale separately as well.

    However, as long as we look at "a computer" as the product, a manufacturer may get away with tying without providing a bare box as an option in many countries by pointing to the fact that a consumer has many alternate sources of bare hardware.

    On the other hand, though, a manufacturers offering a hardware platform with unique capabilities would have bigger problems doing this, as a consumer could claim that the manufacturer was utilizing it's monopoly in the manufacture of that specific hardware to pressure him/her to buy a product they don't want or need.

    Various countries have wildly different laws here, but assuming that manufactureres are automatically free to decide what their system is made up of is wrong almost everywhere.

    (ObDisclaimer: IANAL)

  10. Re:Transfer of license OK by tomhudson · · Score: 5, Interesting
    Here in Quebec all licenses, warranties, guaranties, etc. are transferable, without cost to either party, upon simple notification by mail to the vendor and/or manufacturer. Also, you don't need to register a product to benefit from the warranty.

    Now, since what you bought was actually a copyrighted item, not a licensed item (after all, were you presented with a licensing agreement at the time of sale? Didn't think so. And those EULAs don't count - they're an attempt to impose a license after after the sale) you can do whatever you want with it, except make copies in violation of the copyright.

    Buy the machine with XP, install linux, and sell your copy of XP to whomever you want. They're free to register it, or not.

    If you don't believe me, google the quebec consumer protection act,