by CIO Staff

Microsoft Adds Office to Genuine Software Initiative

News
Apr 25, 20062 mins
Enterprise Applications

Microsoft has introduced a new program for testing if customers have a genuine version of its Office productivity suite, according to the company.

The move is part of Microsoft’s continued efforts to prevent software piracy and the distribution of counterfeit copies of its software.

Microsoft has launched a pilot of the Office Genuine Advantage (OGA) program in seven languages, including Brazilian Portuguese, Czech, Greek, Korean, Simplified Chinese, Russian and Spanish, according to Microsoft. The program will determine if pilot users have a genuine installation of Microsoft Office installed on their computers.

The company declined to disclose where the pilot users are located and how many there are, according to a statement from its public relations firm Waggener Edstrom. Microsoft will expand OGA beyond the pilot phase at some point in the future, but declined to say exactly when.

OGA is part of Microsoft’s Genuine Software Initiative (GSI), which is directed at reducing software counterfeiting and piracy. Microsoft already put in place Windows Genuine Advantage (WGA) as part of this initiative in July 2005.

WGA automatically checks that customers using Windows Update, Microsoft Update for Windows and the Microsoft Download Center have a legitimate version of the Windows operating system before they can download updates or new content from those services. So far, more than 150 million PCs have participated in WGA, the company said.

At the time of WGA’s launch, the program met with mixed reviews from customers because of a flaw that identified some versions of Windows as counterfeit when they were actually genuine copies. Because of this, the automated verification feature was immediately hacked so users could avoid running the program when using Microsoft update services. Microsoft has since repaired the flaws.

Microsoft has increased its efforts in recent years to fight software piracy and the counterfeiting of its software products. In addition to the GSI, the company has been working with hardware vendors to fight piracy and counterfeiting in countries that are prone to software piracy, such as China.

-Elizabeth Montalbano, IDG News Service

This article is posted on our Microsoft Informer page. For more news on the Redmond, Wash.-based powerhouse, keep checking in.

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