I'm definitely not an IP lawyer but it seems reasonable that when a
company sells a license they can't just yank the functionality out from
under the buyer. In the case of something like Encore, seems like if
Adobe wants users to uninstall it, they need to offer a functionally
similar product to replace it. If they want people to switch from CS6
to CC, fine; but the tools need to be there. --J.B.
John Pale pale.edit@gmail.com [Avid-L2] wrote:
>
>
> I obliquely mentioned the licensing issue. In the case of Encore,
> people have bought and paid for that app, and its now discontinued.
> If you actually still need to use it, it would be insane to delete
> it...but that is what you are legally supposed to do, I guess.
>
> On Thu, May 16, 2019 at 2:12 AM Pat Horridge pat@horridge.org.uk
> <mailto:pat@horridge.org.uk> [Avid-L2] <Avid-L2@yahoogroups.com
> <mailto:Avid-L2@yahoogroups.com>> wrote:
>
> You are aware Adobe as removed the licenses for older versions of
> Cs including CS6
> Having it installed is breaching their licensing.
> 2 versions back is all they will authorise going forward.
> How good is the current CC in opening a CS6 project?
>
> Pat Horridge
>
>
>
>
Posted by: John Beck <jb30343@windstream.net>
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