Windows 10 Pro with ISO file from the manufacturer
Unlimited term
You will receive the following scope of delivery by email and on the PDF invoice:
1x product key Windows 10 Pro
1x link to download the software (manufacturer's website sent to your delivery address on eBay.)
For questions we are happy to help. Send us an eBay message or give us a call.
The display image is only used as a sample.
The authenticity of our licenses is legally certified.
Copyright notice
The images, brand names and trademarks used are the property of the rights holders
and are only used here to make the presentation easier to understand.
LEGAL LOCATION:
"A software manufacturer cannot oppose the resale of its 'used' licenses that enable the use of its programs downloaded from the Internet."
From press release No. 94/12 on the judgment in case C-128/11 of the Court of Justice of the European Union (ECJ) The European Court of Justice (ECJ), as the highest judicial body of the European Union, has provided final clarity with its judgment and trade with used computer programs declared to be fundamentally lawful.
The ECJ also ruled that used software trading is also permitted if it is software that has been transmitted online.
The Federal Court of Justice then fully confirmed the fundamental decision of the ECJ on July 17th, 2013 with regard to the underlying legal issues.
And the judgment of the ECJ also applies to volume licenses and their splitting. This was confirmed by the Frankfurt am Main Higher Regional Court in proceedings between Adobe and a software vendor.
In their judgment, the 13 judges of the large chamber clearly stated that the exhaustion principle applies to every first sale of software. The ECJ even decreed that the second purchaser may download the software again from the manufacturer in the case of licenses transferred online:? In addition, the exhaustion of the distribution right extends to the copy of the program in the version improved and updated by the copyright holder ?, so the ECJ. The Court thus went well beyond the final motion of the ECJ Advocate General of April 24, 2012.