Posted 30 June 2020 - 12:31 AM
Posted 30 June 2020 - 04:13 AM
No
The OEM key is tied to the original machine and can not legally be used on any other machine.
Posted 30 June 2020 - 05:01 AM
So from what I'm understanding is that retail and oem can be used for only ONE pc at a time? Oem key is typically used for repair people or computer making companies, in a sense I am the maker of my pc. So I could either, buy retail key, use my oem key from my laptop (attach to account) and in a sense swap users and it would be legit, buy a oem key from random person online(which wouldn't my oem key just be more smart to use?), or get it free and have the watermark(can I still use steam and internet?). Thanks to anyone who replies, I'm just trying to understand keys and licensing. Ps. Does anyone know how to attach oem to account, then use my account to do a fresh install on my pc?
OEM keys are usually meant for big manufacturers. Microsoft does not promise you can transfer OEM key into another machine.
Retail keys allow indefinite number of transfers between machines.
Microsoft promises both keys work on one machine same time.
All your scenarios are valid. However like I said, OEM key is not guaranteed to work on desktop.
No
The OEM key is tied to the original machine and can not legally be used on any other machine.
Wrong. First, OEM key is not tied to original machine. Even Microsoft's official tools disagree with this (activation troubleshooter "I made a recent hardware change").
Secondly, it is legal to transfer OEM key into another machine:
That matters in European Union. Outside EU Microsoft have pretty hard to tell something is illegal if they in practice provide tools that allow these so called illegal things to happen...
Posted 30 June 2020 - 09:35 AM
Posted 30 June 2020 - 09:37 AM
Posted 30 June 2020 - 10:28 AM
I wish I knew where I read it, but I read that it is legal to move an oem key. The only thing is you have to put the oem key to your account, so that way it's tied to you and the only other catch is it can only be active on ONE pc. But it is not a guarantee it will work(hence I may have to troubleshoot it)
That applies mostly on Windows 10 as on many cases there is no OEM key at all. This time you have the key. You could still try making account, it may help or then not.
Honestly I feel conscience wise, that it's better to use my oem key then if I bought a cheap pirated one. For all I know an oem key I buy cheap, could just be like the one I plan to use. Which is still in the "grey area"
It's up to you. Remember that cheap OEM keys are not necessarily pirated, they may be perfectly legal. It's just very hard to tell if they are.
Posted 30 June 2020 - 04:20 PM
What OS is on the desktop computer right now?
Mr. Rocky Bennett
Linux User and Windows 10 Lover.
Posted 30 June 2020 - 04:47 PM
Why don't you simply upgrade the Windows 8.1 that is already in your desktop to Windows 10. It is quick and easy and legal.
Edited by Rocky Bennett, 01 July 2020 - 07:40 AM.
Mr. Rocky Bennett
Linux User and Windows 10 Lover.
Posted 30 June 2020 - 05:28 PM
Windows 8.1
I don't understand. If your PC already has Windows 8.1 on it, why do you want to move the Windows 8.1 that is on your laptop over to your PC?
Mr. Rocky Bennett
Linux User and Windows 10 Lover.
Posted 30 June 2020 - 05:31 PM
Posted 30 June 2020 - 05:50 PM
Your answer to this question
"What OS is on the desktop computer right now?"
was
Windows 8.1
Mr. Rocky Bennett
Linux User and Windows 10 Lover.
Posted 30 June 2020 - 05:57 PM
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